|
||
Pro Tools
FILMFESTIVALS | 24/7 world wide coverageWelcome ! Enjoy the best of both worlds: Film & Festival News, exploring the best of the film festivals community. Launched in 1995, relentlessly connecting films to festivals, documenting and promoting festivals worldwide. Working on an upgrade soon. For collaboration, editorial contributions, or publicity, please send us an email here. User login |
Goodbye Mr. B: Death Of A Film GiantTuesday, July 31-------It perhaps seemed improbable that one of the world's funniest filmmakers was a devoted acolyte of one of the world's most serious. But that was the case for Woody Allen, whose devotion to the Swedish filmmaker Ingmar Bergman was a life-long obsession. He often referenced the great director in his films. In ANNIE HALL, in a scene that all hardcore cinephiles can relate to, Woody refuses to go to a screening of Bergman's FACE TO FACE because he and Diane Keaton have missed the first 60 seconds of the film ("I can't go into a movie in the middle", he famously remarked). In MANHATTAN, Keaton ridicules Woody's contention that "Bergman is the only true film artist in cinema today". Woody was not just content to praise the Master, but in many of his serious films (INTERIORS, ANOTHER WOMAN, SEPTEMBER, SHADOWS AND FOG, CRIMES AND MISDEMEANORS), his emulation of the themes that haunted Bergman throughout his legendary career was a mix of homage and hero worship. So, things must have gone deadly silent in Woody's Fifth Avenue penthouse apartment today when he learned, along with the entire world, that the Master, Ingmar Bergman, had passed away.
In his more than 40 years in the cinema, he often focused on his two favorite themes: the often stormy relationship between the sexes and mankind's longing for God. In an essay he wrote in the beginning of his career, he found in cinema "a language that literally is spoken from soul to soul in expressions that, almost sensuously, escape the restrictive control of the intellect.” He started his career in the late 1940s, directing films that were widely hailed in his native Sweden, but barely known outside his country. However, by the mid-1950s, he began to produce the metaphysical allegories and semi-religious parables that brought him international recognition. SMILES OF A SUMMER NIGHT (1956) won a special prize at the Cannes Film Festival that year. The following year, he directed one of his most recognizable films, THE SEVENTH SEAL, the haunting tale of a knight (played by Bergman favorite Max Von Sydow) who confronts a world terrorized by the Black Plague. The chess matches between the knight and the shadowy figure of Death are among the best known scenes in the history of film. THE SEVENTH SEAL was an international smash, and won the director another special prize at the Cannes Film Festival.
This was the first of a trilogy of intimate religious films that defined one of his major themes....the loneliness of modern man, estranged from his faith in God and the love of his fellow human beings. With subsequent films WINTER LIGHT (1963) and THE SILENCE (1965), Bergman's questioning of whether "God is dead" was the subject of passionate discussions in the media and the common culture. These themes were inspired by an episode when Bergman was hospitalized and realized he was no longer scared of death. He realized during his brush with mortality that love remains the only hope of salvation for the unloved and unrepentant. While some critics jeered the films as obscure and pretentious, Bergman's reputation among intellectuals, students and religious figures elevated him beyond simply being a master filmmaker.
Sandy Mandelberger, In Memoriam Editor 31.07.2007 | In Memoriam's blog Cat. : Astrid Soderberg Widding Autumn Sonata Bibi Andersson Billie August Business Business Cinema of Sweden Daniel Bergman Diane Keaton Entertainment Entertainment Erland Josephson Face to Face Fanny and Alexander Films Gotland Gunnar Björnstrand Hour of the wolf Human Interest Human Interest In Memoriam Ingmar Bergman Ingmar Bergman Ingrid Bergman Ingrid Bergman Ingrid Thulin Liv Ullman Liv Ullmann Max von Sydow New York Times New York Times Oscar Oscars Sandy Mandelberger second Academy Award Sven Nykvist Swedish language the Academy Award the Cannes Film Festival The Seventh Seal The Seventh Seal the Venice Film Festival The Virgin Spring Victor Sjostrom Wild Strawberries Wild Strawberries Woody Allen Woody Allen
|
LinksThe Bulletin Board > The Bulletin Board Blog Following News Interview with IFTA Chairman (AFM)
Interview with Cannes Marche du Film Director
Filmfestivals.com dailies live coverage from > Live from India
Useful links for the indies: > Big files transfer
+ SUBSCRIBE to the weekly Newsletter Deals+ Special offers and discounts from filmfestivals.com Selected fun offers
> Bonus Casino
User imagesAbout In Memoriam![]() (International Media Resources) [img_assist|nid=5860|title=|desc=|link=node|align=undefined|width=140|height=105]
IN MEMORIAM Obituary Profiles of Entertainment Industry Figures And The Legacies They Leave Behind View my profile Send me a message The EditorUser contributionsUser links |