Film Review
In 1982, Ingmar Bergman was adamant that the final entry in his
36-year-long career as a film director would be the spectacular period
drama
Fanny and Alexander - a
lavish production that would weave together the various strands of his
previous work into one epic colourful tapestry. As it turned out,
this was not the end of Bergman's career - he continued making
low budget dramas and documentaries for Swedish television throughout the 1980s and '90s, and
bowed out, in great style, with the 2003 production
Saraband.
Fanny and Alexander may not
have been Bergman's last word, but it is one of his most successful and
most highly regarded works. The film won no less than four Oscars
in 1983 (including the awards for Best Foreign Film and Best Cinematography) as well as
the César for Best Foreign Film in 1984.
At first sight,
Fanny and Alexander
would appear to be the least typical of Bergman's films. In
its complete (and recommended) version, the film runs to just over five
hours, the longest of the director's films, and it is in glorious
colour (Bergman's preference for black-and-white is
well-documented). What is perhaps most striking about the film is
its sumptuous design combined with an almost operatic scale - it's more
redolent of Visconti or Fellini than Bergman. When you consider
that most of the director's other films are low-key, introspective
dramas with a small cast and a very contained setting, the sprawling
beast that is
Fanny and Alexander
would seem to be the perfect antithesis of an Ingmar Bergman film.
And yet, paradoxically,
Fanny and
Alexander is unmistakably a Bergman film. This is apparent
in the depth of characterisation, the interplay of emotions and the
occurrence of such quintessential Bergman themes as faith, love and the
nature of existence. It is also the most intentionally
autobiographical of Bergman's films. The central character,
10-year-old Alexander, through whose consciousness the entire narrative
is filtered, is Bergman in all but name. It is well known
that the director was traumatised in childhood by his father, an
austere Lutheran minister, who is represented in this film by the
bishop Vergerus. Perhaps the main reason why this film makes such
a deep impression on the spectator is because it
is a personal film, with Bergman
drawing on his own - possibly very painful - childhood experiences.
Fanny and Alexander is
certainly one of Ingmar Bergman's most accessible and engaging films,
although there's plenty of depth if you're inclined to look beneath the
surface. The film's appeal is due mainly to the fact that most -
if not all - of what we see is through the eyes of the young
Alexander. Not everything that we see is real of course - the
boy's colourful imagination gives rein to plenty of flights of fancy,
and often things are distorted or misinterpreted, as would happen in
the mind of any child. The end result is a marvellously effective
dreamlike evocation of childhood - sometimes highly comical, but equally there
are some moments of genuine raw poignancy.
In common with any other Bergman film, the cast is an impeccable
ensemble of some very talented performers. However, the film's
focal point is the boy Alexander, played by the instantly engaging
11-year-old Bertil Guve, with whom Bergman developed a
close friendship during the shooting of the film. The director
remarked that the young actor seemed to be exactly as he was when he
was a child. Two other actors worthy of a mention are Harriet
Andersson and Erland Josephson, who each appeared in a number of
Bergman's previous films - Andersson in
Summer with Monika (1953) and
Josephson in
Scenes from a Marriage (1973).
What the film is mainly concerned with is Alexander's emergence from
childhood into the Big Bad World of grown-ups and tax inspectors.
The trigger for this emotional upheaval isn't the usual kind of thing
(ugly facial spots or a sudden aversion to soap) but the premature
death of his father. It doesn't help that this momentous event
happens just after he has become acquainted with Shakespeare's
Hamlet. Not surprisingly, the
boy doesn't take kindly to his mother hitching up with another man,
with indecent haste, and he ends up being slightly prejudiced against
his new stepfather. Too much culture too early can be a bad
thing.
It is easy to sympathise with Alexander's loathing for Bishop
Edvard. Yet it is the bishop, not Alexander, who becomes
the tragic figure of the film. Can this be because Alexander (and
hence Bergman) secretly regrets his feelings for his austere
guardian? There is a scene, near the end of the film,
where the boy seems to realise of the injustice he may have committed
in rejecting his stepfather so forcefully - and thereby allows himself
to be condemned to a lifetime of guilt.
Bishop Edvard is certainly portrayed as the villain of the piece.
It is a slavish adherence to the precepts of his religion that makes
him incapable of establishing any meaningful rapport with his wife and
stepchildren, and it is no surprise that they grow to hate him.
The bishop's love for his new family is real, but it is as cold and
unwelcoming as the bare stone walls of his home, lacking the warmth of
compassion which his faith has driven out of him. As in
The Seventh Seal (1957),
Bergman is offering an uncompromising critique of organised religion -
can it make sense to profess love for an unseen God and have no love
for individual men and women? Aren't religions far more effective
at engendering hate rather than love?
Fanny and Alexander is a deep
and thought-provoking work but it is also hugely entertaining. At
its simplest, it's a lovingly drawn portrait of a seriously
dysfunctional family, in which the adults are seen, again from a
child's viewpoint, as buffoons, angels and monsters. Alexander's
two uncles provide plenty of comic relief - one is a pompous university
professor who is saddled with the dimmest of wives and is constantly
concerned with getting money out of his mother, the other an ageing Don Juan who
isn't the slightest bit put out when he puts a
servant girl in the family way. Between the moments of
devastating poignancy and dramatic tension, the film erupts into farce
of the kind which only a particularly dour Lutheran pastor could fail
to find amusing.
© James Travers 2008
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Next Ingmar Bergman film:
After the Rehearsal (1984)
Film Synopsis
December 1907. The once-famous actress Helena Ekdahl welcomes her
family to her home to celebrate Christmas. Her sons - Gustav
Adolf, Carl and Oscar arrive with their wives and children.
Helena's favourite is Oscar, who runs the family's repertory
theatre. During a rehearsal of
Hamlet,
Oscar falls ill and dies soon after. In her grief, his wife
Emilie turns to the bishop Edvard Vergerus, and a marriage quickly
ensues. It is not long before Emilie realises her mistake.
Her new husband's austere lifestyle and uncompromising harshness makes
life a misery for herself and her two young children, Fanny and
Alexander. When Vergerus refuses to grant Emilie a divorce,
desperate measures are called for...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.