Sweden drama
1957
bw 90 min.
Director: Ingmar Bergman
CLV: $49.95 - available
           1 disc, catalog # CC1250L
VHS: available from Home Vision Cinema
The
opening nightmare in Wild Strawberries comes as a shocking reminder of
death to Isak, the film's central character. He finds himself in the Old Town of
Stockholm, assaulted by a burning sun. He plunges hastily into the few patches of
shadow that the street affords. Gateways loom, great areas of black, used by
director Ingmar Bergman to suggest a hostile nothingness. Isak is alone, faced by
successive portraits of disaster: a watch without hands, a human figure that
crumbles on the sidewalk, a coffin that contains his own body.Ingmar Bergman
is still startled by the speed at which the years pass. He remembers the smallest
things -- toys, noises, smells, light. "When I look at my brother," he told Liv
Ullmann, "it seems it was only yesterday we were running barefoot in the garden,
and I feel a fear inside me."
In the spring of 1957, immediately after
directing a television version of Hjalmar Bergman's Mr. Sleeman Is Coming
(his first contact with the new medium), Ingmar Bergman settled down to write the
screenplay for Wild Strawberries -- a film dealing with that
"fear."
There was no difficulty in setting up the project. The success of
The Seventh Seal and the foreign sales of Bergman's movies had convinced
Svensk Filmindustri that they had an asset on their hands. That organization's
Carl Anders Dymling, in fact, persuaded the aged and ailing director Victor
Sjšstršm (The Wind, He Who Gets Slapped) to take the part of Isak
Borg. Sjšstršm was seventy-eight years old and sometimes querulous. He was a
lonely man whose wife was dead. His health was poor, and during the filming he
often forgot his lines, a failing that would only aggravate him the more.
Cinematographer Gunnar Fischer says that several scenes had to be shot indoors
for Sjšstršm's sake. "We had to make some very bad back-projection in the car
because we never knew if Victor would come back alive the next day."
Nevertheless, as long as Victor was home by 5:15 P.M. each day, "and had his
whiskey punctually, all went well."
The phenomena of old age wherein childhood
memories return with ever-increasing clarity while great stretches of the prime
of life vanish into obscurity is the nub of Wild Strawberries.
Isak
Borg, the distinguished professor emeritus who lives alone with his housekeeper,
can only come to terms with his egocentricity by traveling back in time to his
earliest youth, finding there the seeds of his failure as husband, lover, and
father.
The opening nightmare sequence seems a tribute to Sjšstršm's own great
silent film, The Phantom Carriage. Sound effects, as in the opening
flashback of The Naked Night, leave a deep impression. The silence at one
point is so profound that Isak becomes aware of his own massive heartbeat. When
the carriage crashes into a lamppost and disgorges its casket, the axle squeals
insistently, like a newborn baby, suggesting the proximity of birth and death.
Bergman has always been aware of the importance of the soundtrack, seeking a
little extra sound that will give a scene an added dimension.
The set for this
sequence was built on the lot at RŒsunda, but the shot of the carriage rounding
the street corner was taken by Gunnar Fischer in a deserted Old Town at almost 2
A.M. one summer morning. A couple emerging from a restaurant were startled by the
spectacle of a coach without a driver hurtling down the narrow, cobbled lane. The
dummy that Borg mistakes for a pedestrian was constructed from a balloon and a
silk stocking. All the walls had to be painted pure white to achieve the glare
that Bergman wanted.
Wild Strawberries won the Golden Bear at the
Berlin Film Festival in 1958 and was acknowledged around the world as the seal on
Bergman's career. Gunnar Fischer's cinematography and the haunting regretful
music of Erik Nordgren are beyond reproach. The warmth and gentility of Victor
Sjšstršm's performance render Isak Borg a character so sympathetic that the
audience would side with him however damning the accusations.
Some months after
the opening of the film, Bergman met a childhood friend, who told him that while
he was watching Wild Strawberries he "began to think of Aunt Berta, who
was sitting all alone in BorlŠnge. I couldn't get her out of my thoughts, and
when my wife and I came home, I said let's invite Aunt Berta over at
Easter."
That, says Bergman, is the best review he has ever had.
-- PETER
COWIE, from Ingmar Bergman: A Critical Biography
Credits
Director
and Screenplay: Ingmar Bergman
Producer: Allan Ekelund
Cinematographer:
Gunnar Fischer
Music: Erick Nordgren
Sets: Gittan Gustafsson
Costumes:
Millie Stršm
Editor: Oscar Rosander
Transfer
This edition of
Wild Strawberries was transferred from a 35mm master print.