Thursday, 19 March 2009

1147 Ingmar Bergman Death Reported

Ingmar Bergman died recently aged 89 and one of my few regrets as I approach my three score years and ten is that I did not experience his work as my life progressed and that it is only over the past two years that I have been enriched and enlightened by the greatest artist in portraying fundamental questions of the human condition in the most profound spiritual and psychological depths. And yet there is also the awareness that had I experienced some of films earlier I would have unable to appreciate their intellectual greatness, or been unable to complete a viewing because of their emotional intensity.

Tonight having unintentionally slept during the evening and uncertain if I should go to bed, work or be entertained, I was about to channel hop the satellite when I discovered that the BBC was showing a programme on his work, using the three people he granted interviews over his last four decades, our Melvyn Lord Bragg, writer and documentary maker about the arts, French film maker Olivier Assayas and Swedish film maker Marie Nyrerod whom Bergman gave his longest interview when retired to Faro Island in Baltic Sean. It is she who provided the first clue to why her country produced such a genius. Sweden is a cold sparsely populated land for most of the year, so that its people are restricted to their homes and they look into themselves and each other.

But it was first Melvyn Bragg and then Olivier Assayas who made my heart leap with delight as they spoke of their first experience as very young men of being swept off their feet by young Harriet Anderson in Summer with Monika, and although attracted by young love during the beautiful Swedish summer, something I also experienced as a young man for two brief weeks in 1963, they both were aware of something deeper happening which they only able to comprehend later.

Bergman admitted that he was afraid of death, but not of life, and yet he lived alone on his Island listening classical music because it gave him a sense of some force greater than human existence, yet those who found his film work gloomy, such as film maker Ken Russell, say more about themselves because in fact of his all his works one can be said to be pessimistic, Winter Light which is about the loss of faith by a priest, a subject which has interested since discovering just before my 60th birthday who my father had been.

I have yet to experience all his works and there are some important omissions which I hope to remedy before I too face that final moment of human self aware consciousness.

I pause to find the list of films watched against the list of films to view on Bergmanorama.com to find that its opening screen is now a series of photos. Having also read some of the obituaries and feature articles, it is evident that most touch on only those works which have become well known, which appealed the writer and that only those who have systematically studied his work in chronological sequence against what was japanning in the cinema in each decade can appreciate what a giant he was, writing and directing over forty full length films, writing the script for another dozen and directing over 125 works in the theatre including Shakespeare, Ibsen, Tennessee Williams, Chekov , over 25 TV film dramas, with separate television productions of his two most important works on marital relationships, Scenes from a Marriage 1973 and his last work both for TV and Film in 2003 Saraband together with his longest running film work Fanny and Alexander 1982/1983 and over forty works for radio commencing in 1944 when I was five years of age and which means he created between three and four works throughout sixty years of working.

Many of his early films were released with different titles depending on the language version and of the seven released in the 1940's my experienced list has the first Crisis, Port of Call and Three Strange Loves. It was the 1950's when I became a teenager that he came to world wide attention with Summer with Monika/Monika 1953 and which I did not see until I was sixteen in my first year of working in central London and attending Promenade concerts for the time at the Royal Albert Hall and basements jazz clubs in or near Soho. This beautifully photographed film is about the reality of young infatuation and sex in which the young man is left to look after their child. I have now also seen Waiting Women/Secrets of Women 1952 and A Lesson in Love 1954, The Magician 1958 and his most well known, the Seventh Seal 1957, which I saw at the time and several time son TV, one of his films about spirituality and the possible nature of God, But the film from this period where I have seen six of thirteen which I rank as one his most important because of its theme is Wild Strawberries 1957 about an old man preparing fro death and looking back on his life,

I have also seen the Virgin Spring his first film release of the 1960's, but not recently, Through a Glass Darkly 1961 one of his important works on mental health issues, The Silence 1963, Winter Light also 1963, Personna 1966 and Shame 1968, six of eleven of that decade. Only three films of the nine created in the 1970's Cries and Whispers 1972, but the other two are the great
psychological dramas of the cinema. Autumn Sonata 1978 is the most painful psychologically and emotionally intense films about the nature of being a creative woman who is also a mother and on the relationship between all daughters and their mothers. It is not recommended for any woman who has major unresolved issues as a mother in relation to their daughter and vice versa. It has the most extraordinary performance of Ingrid Bergman before her death, portraying the guilt ridden mother who chooses to continue with her declining life as a concert virtuoso and Liv Ullman gives one of the greatest, if not the greatest acting performances on screen as the daughter desperate for her mother's love and recognition, and honest communication, tells the truth on one of the most excruciating painful moments ever to be screened.

It does not surprise me that Sweden's top marital counsellor approached Bergman for advice after watching the television version of Scenes from a Marriage which has Liv Ullman as the devastated wife and Erland Josephson the errant husband. Although this film stands on its own putting such other work such as Whose Afraid of Virginia Wolf with Liz Taylor and Richard Burton into perspective, it his decision to create the sequel Saraband as his last film in 2003, an which also towers above all other work as a monument about having relationships when one is old that viewed together, but with a break for a good meal and several glasses of wine, that should convince any remaining doubter about his unfailing brilliance. The film again features Liv and Erland, meeting up after thirty years in real time and sharing one night together in the most beautiful of tender love scenes ever screened. It also covers the relationship between fathers and their sons, and fathers and their daughters with the same brutal sincerity and truth as Autumn Sonata.

Of his last four films I did see the short version of Fanny and Alexander before, but the full four hour length edition only recently. I bore everyone with reminding that what we do and say and who we do it with or say to, lives with you and them for eternity, an this for me is the subject of the film, together with " be careful what you wish for, because those the Gods wish to punish they will grant what is asked of them." I am yet to find out if Bergman died alone and how he faced his final moments. I hope he remembered his gift to people such as me and to the future of humanity.

Saturday, 14 March 2009

1121 Bergman's Fanny and Alexander begins

The intention had been to watch Chronos the prequel to Pan's Labyrinth but there was difficulty in loading so I turned to the first disk of Fanny and Alexander, the TV version of 312 minutes. I had previously experienced the 188 minute original theatre version and the full version, but some years ago, before attempting to view as many of the films of Ingmar Bergman that I could find on DVD

I sat for a few minutes trying to remember the story, the subjects, the moods, and even during the long introduction which covers the involvement of an artistic family during Christmas celebrations in Uppsala in 1907, the year of the birth of my mother, and the Swedish Oxford town which I visited in 1963. This, the last film theatre version, the antithesis of the action movie, is used by Ingmar Bergman to re-explore the main themes of all his previous work.

It is Christmas and Alexander and Fanny are the children of the influential and wealthy Ekdahl family who are able to afford running a theatrical company and theatre in which their mother is a staring actress Emilie and their father the director. They live in the extended family home of many servants and where the remains of the Christmas evening dinner will feed the rest of the town. We learn much of the way of life and behaviour of the family and its society during 24 hours which includes a nativity play attended by the top society of the of the community, the preparations for the family Christmas dinner in which the servants participate and where the remains of the meal will feed all the poor of the area, and of how they spend the short time before attending mass taken by the Bishop, a contemporary Casanova cum Marquis De Sade.

I had forgotten this crucial aspect of the film, which arrived at random rather than a planned choice for this moment when I had decided to end my 101 Reformed Marquis Project, (The Master) after approaching 101 enthusiasts, having previously intended to continue until I had engaged in 101 conversations in the role, because of the urgent need to switch to Romeo and a Juliet, that is one Romeo and one Juliet having decided to begin the writing of one work to replace Fragments of Time and Fragments of Memory, while travelling on the train from Newcastle to London on June 29th, 2. 42pm.

Having recently re-experienced the film, the Butterfly Effect, based on chaos theory whereas I contend that everything is explainable given the ability to trace the interactions of all human and other life form behaviour and natural phenomena from all time previous, I am caught in a situation where I decide to fundamentally change my life because after being contacted by someone who reason and the knowledge of others says does not exist, then "know" the time is right to write the book of books, just as when I knew, within months of that first visit to the Tyneside Baltic about to celebrate its fifth anniversary, and decide to bring to a premature end the 101 the reformed Marquis De Sade persona, I attend by accident a film which glorifies sadistic violence to make the Marquis into a cuddly teddy bear, and then two mornings after an extraordinary woman sits opposite me in a train and watching her enter the Victoria Station Boots, I find her before me in a queue in the same Boots in a situation where I had exited a train on the same route. but bought two newspapers and read them stretching one cup of coffee for half an hour, and then to day, I received a response to my one hundred and first De Sade project request, and then after failed attempts to change this keyboard from English into Russian characters ?? ???? ?? ???????? ? ?????? ????? ??? ?? ?????? ???? ????? it does so and I quickly work out how to switch back and forth! Why I ask myself are you learning to write using Russian characters is a question I hope to explain? And what has this all to do with the experience of re-watching Fanny and Alexander? To be accurate after watching the first disk and first three hours of the film which I will complete after an early lunch, it is 11.30, checking my e mail and if there has been a snail mail delivery.