While probably best known as the conclusion of his nameless trilogy that began with Through a Glass Darkly and Winter Light (and, due to its sexual content, "the largest unwanted audience for a Bergman film" as he put it), The Silence marked some sort of turning point in Bergman's career, perhaps one of the more frightening. His trilogy was a collection of chamber dramas, with limited characters in even more limited space. Through a Glass Darkly found four characters (a father, daughter, son, and husband of the daughter) on a secluded island; Winter Light took place mostly in church vestibules. The Silence has, essentially, three characters, stuck in a nameless foreign country, torn apart by war, and the majority of the "action" takes place in a nearly empty hotel and train. Anna (Gunnel Lindblom) is traveling with her ailing sister Ester (Ingrid Thulin) and curious son (Jörgen Lindström). They are forced to stop their journey in this unknown country to allow for Ester to rest before reembarking on their trip.
19 June 2006
Faithless
While probably best known as the conclusion of his nameless trilogy that began with Through a Glass Darkly and Winter Light (and, due to its sexual content, "the largest unwanted audience for a Bergman film" as he put it), The Silence marked some sort of turning point in Bergman's career, perhaps one of the more frightening. His trilogy was a collection of chamber dramas, with limited characters in even more limited space. Through a Glass Darkly found four characters (a father, daughter, son, and husband of the daughter) on a secluded island; Winter Light took place mostly in church vestibules. The Silence has, essentially, three characters, stuck in a nameless foreign country, torn apart by war, and the majority of the "action" takes place in a nearly empty hotel and train. Anna (Gunnel Lindblom) is traveling with her ailing sister Ester (Ingrid Thulin) and curious son (Jörgen Lindström). They are forced to stop their journey in this unknown country to allow for Ester to rest before reembarking on their trip.
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Oftentimes, when I start watching a lot of films by a director, I'll have an early favorite that's later replaced as I see more of the director's films. This is not the case with Bergman -- The Silence was one of the first few films I saw by him, I was bowled over by it, and it remains among my top few favorites by him, only possibly exceeded by Fanny & Alexander. In addition to the fertile sexual, spiritual, and identity issues that you pick up on, the film is a searing political allegory on the failure to communicate and its translation into violence -- Bergman mirrors the lack of interpersonal communication with a similar absence between societies (the incomprehensible language of the unidentified country the sisters wind up in). It's a terrifying vision of humanity's total failure to connect -- with loved ones, with God, with the ever-present "Other." Only the boy in the film is able to get past the language barrier and engage with everyone he encounters in some way, providing some measure of hope to the film's vision, though it's by no means clear that this openness to others will be enduring, or merely a product of youth.
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