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Nickdfresh
07-30-2007, 06:56 PM
July 30, 2007
Ingmar Bergman, Famed Film Director, Dies at 89
By MERVYN ROTHSTEIN

http://graphics8.nytimes.com/images/2007/07/30/arts/30bergman-2-600.jpg
(Max Von Sydow plays chess with death in "The Seventh Seal.")

Ingmar Bergman, the “poet with the camera” who is considered one of the greatest directors in motion picture history, died today on the small island of Faro where he lived on the Baltic coast of Sweden, Astrid Soderbergh Widding, president of The Ingmar Bergman Foundation, said. Bergman was 89.

Critics called Mr. Bergman one of the directors — the others being Federico Fellini and Akira Kurosawa — who dominated the world of serious film making in the second half of the 20th century.

He moved from the comic romp of lovers in “Smiles of a Summer Night” to the Crusader’s search for God in “The Seventh Seal,” and from the gripping portrayal of fatal illness in “Cries and Whispers” to the alternately humorous and horrifying depiction of family life in “Fanny and Alexander.”

Mr. Bergman dealt with pain and torment, desire and religion, evil and love; in Mr. Bergman’s films, “this world is a place where faith is tenuous; communication, elusive; and self-knowledge, illusory,” Michiko Kakutani wrote in The New York Times Magazine in a profile of the director. God is either silent or malevolent; men and women are creatures and prisoners of their desires.

For many filmgoers and critics, it was Mr. Bergman more than any other director who in the 1950s brought a new seriousness to film making.

“Bergman was the first to bring metaphysics — religion, death, existentialism — to the screen,” Bertrand Tavernier, the French film director, once said. “But the best of Bergman is the way he speaks of women, of the relationship between men and women. He’s like a miner digging in search of purity.”

He influenced many other film makers, including Woody Allen, who according to The Associated Press said in a tribute in 1988 that Mr. Bergman was “probably the greatest film artist, all things considered, since the invention of the motion picture camera.”

In his more than 40 years in the cinema, Mr. Bergman made about 50 films, often focusing on two themes — the relationship between the sexes, and the relationship between mankind and God. Mr. Bergman found in cinema, he wrote in a 1965 essay, “a language that literally is spoken from soul to soul in expressions that, almost sensuously, escape the restrictive control of the intellect.”

Cont'd here. (http://www.nytimes.com/2007/07/30/movies/30cnd-bergman.html?_r=5&oref=slogin&oref=slogin&oref=slogin&oref=slogin&oref=login)

Hardrock69
07-31-2007, 01:46 AM
I just watched The Seventh Seal a couple of months back after hearing about it for years.

R.I.P dude.....you had a great life, a great wife, and made some kickass films.....

bluemustard
07-31-2007, 01:58 PM
Love his movies.
Also Micheangelo Antonioni Died.
Zabriski point was an awsome movie!
RIP

Nickdfresh
08-01-2007, 03:40 PM
Originally posted by Hardrock69
I just watched The Seventh Seal a couple of months back after hearing about it for years.

R.I.P dude.....you had a great life, a great wife, and made some kickass films.....

He also nailed many of his leading ladies...