Bergman and the Swedish Aesthetic
Ingmar Bergman is Sweden’s most influential director; Kelsey
Eichhorn looks at how he contributed to the creation of a distinctive Swedish
aesthetic.
At the beginning of Ingmar Bergman’s 1961 film Through a
Glass Darkly there is a seemingly unremarkable short scene between two of the
main characters. Martin, the husband of Karin (the film’s only female
protagonist) and Karin’s father (who we know simply as ‘Papa’) are setting the
nets for fish just off the small island where the family has rented a
summerhouse. Martin asks Papa if he received his letter a few weeks before, and
the two discuss Karin’s health. It is at this early juncture that the audience
learns that Karin’s illness, whatever it is, is incurable.
The conversation is short and matter-of-fact, with the two
men carrying out their respective jobs as Martin rows slowly along and Papa
feeds out the netting - the film cutting back and forth between them in a
conventional shot-reverse-shot structure. They pause briefly to concentrate on
their talk, and the film pulls back to an establishing shot of the boat and the
two men; the stark bleakness of the ocean and the sparsely vegetated island
behind them. While ostensibly unexceptional, the scene is pure Bergman: stoic
and minimalist in its dialogue and performance, concentrated in its aesthetic
and composition.The unpretentious style creates a realism and honesty that has
come to characterise Swedish cinema, and Swedish culture, throughout history.
Ingmar Bergman and
Ingrid Thulin | © wikimedia commons
Bergman almost single handedly put Swedish cinema on the
world map. Following the early success of the deeply symbolic Summer with
Monika (1952) and The Seventh Seal(1957), Bergman was launched into
international art cinema stardom. As his cult status began to fade in the face
of French New Wave heroes Godard and Truffaut, his films unexpectedly made an
abrupt transition from the symbolic to the persona - reigniting the film
world’s fascination with this distinctly Scandinavian style. The proliferation
of silent film from Sweden in the early 1900s introduced Sweden’s profound preoccupation
with issues of social and political justice that would feed Swedish cinema’s
future celebration of honesty and realism. Bergman heralded in an age of
modernism in the arts that correlated with not only this heritage of Swedish
stoicism but also with the progressive social atmosphere of Sweden in the
latter half of the 20th Century.
Through his glittering career of over 50 feature and
television films, Bergman firmly established the major thematic concerns of
Swedish filmmaking, which remain consistent today. The standard stylistic
trends of minimalism and realism grew out of Bergman’s tendency towards the
darker side of human nature; his films often had heavy themes, such as those
known collectively throughout art as the ‘Scandinavian Depression’ - death,
loneliness, love and insanity. The truest testament to Ingmar Bergman’s status
as the premier force of Swedish cinema, is that the aesthetic trends he
exploited and developed so masterfully have endured beyond his own artistic
endeavours to influence later generations of filmmakers who are now embracing
new and evolving subjects and themes.
The minimalism and realism championed by Bergman’s haunting
tales can be seen in various incarnations in the 1980s trend of Swedish comedy
and melodrama and in the recent flood of Swedish horror and thriller films. The
wildly popular cult hit Let the Right One In (Låt den rätte komma in, 2008)
directed by Tomas Alfredson is a perfect example of the mingling of realism
with a modern Swedish preoccupation with the horror and fantasy genre.
Restrained acting performances, minimalist script writing, inconspicuous
cinematography and a muted, subdued colour palette allow the intense honesty of
human emotion to shine through in a deeply moving story of loneliness and love.
Lukas Moodysson, perhaps the most popular of Sweden’s modern
day directors, first awed cinephiles with his 1998 feature Show Me Love
(Fucking Åmål), which was praised for simple realism and emotional honesty in
his brazen portrayal of a lesbian love affair between two teenagers in a small
Swedish town. At a time when the majority of the world still considered
homosexuality a taboo subject, socially progressive Swedish artists were
creating moving and subtle tributes to the difficulties of love in all its
forms. Moodysson followed one success with another, releasing Together
(Tillsammens, 2008), a story of a small, dysfunctional hippie commune in 1970s
Stockholm. Distinctly different from Bergman’s often-static camera style,
Moodysson employs overt zooms and abrupt tracking and pans to mirror the hectic
environment of the over-crowded and unconventional house. Yet far from
detracting from the honesty and realism of the story, the explicit aesthetic
technique emphasizes the intensely emotional acting performances as characters
struggle simultaneously with the charged political atmosphere of a changing world
and the emotional turmoil of love and loss as even the adults learn they are
continuously in the process of ‘growing up’.
It is unsurprising that these thematic trends of realism,
simplicity and honesty have endured since the beginning of Bergman’s time,
because the very aesthetic devices he introduced to the world, to such fanfare,
grew naturally out of the culture in Sweden: the high value placed on family
life, a strong sense of social justice and equality, the interdependence of
people and their environment and a Lutheran sombreness that portends an intense
release of concealed emotions. In recent years, Moodysson, Alfredson and many
other modern Swedish directors have begun embracing a variety of aesthetic
techniques in a variety of genres that embrace popular trends from a strong and
ever-evolving youth culture in Sweden. Yet, as with Bergman, the underlying
themes and values of their films echo a rich history of cinema that seems to
embody the culture of Sweden itself. In a society often considered shy and
reserved, the deep emotional intensity prevalent in Swedish cinema hints
strongly that still waters really do run deep, and the warm and open welcome
that awaits any who endeavour to truly immerse themselves in Swedish culture
will never disappoint.
By Kelsey Eichhorn
Source: theculturetrip.com
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