Film Review
The Rite is one of the most bewildering, confined
and darkest of Ingmar Bergman's films, made at a time when the director had the confidence
and the motivation to push the boundaries of his art and explore some radically new approaches
to cinematic art. As in his earlier experimental films -
Persona (1966) and
Shame
(1968) -
The Rite addresses metaphysical,
societal and humanist themes within the framework of a minimalist, highly stylised drama.
The central issue of
The Rite is the way
in which professional actors relate to and are treated by their audience - an idea that
Bergman had previously touched on in his 1958 film
The Magician.
The
Rite can be interpreted in a wider sense as an allegory of how human beings relate
to one another in general. To paraphrase Shakespeare, each one of us is an
actor on a global stage. Every encounter we have with another person is, effectively,
a piece of improvised theatre, an act in which we decide what part of ourselves we choose
to reveal.
The idea for
The Rite came
to Bergman shortly after he had completed his three-year tenure as director of the Royal
Dramatic Theatre in Stockholm in the late 1960s. He resigned because he had had
enough of the on-going criticism which made it increasingly difficult for him to pursue
his artistic vision.
The Rite was effectively
Bergman's attempt to exorcise his accumulated antipathy for critics and unsympathetic
audiences. The creepily surreal, slightly bonkers, sequence at the end of the film,
where the three actors get even within the eternally questioning judge, is clearly intended
to represent Bergman's tongue-in-cheek desire for revenge on his audience, yet is also
symbolic of the judgement that will come to any man who judges others too harshly.
The film was made for Swedish television, on a modest budget (it was shot in just
nine days), and broadcast in March 1969. Whilst the ambiguous nature of the plot
and characters is somewhat frustrating, making it initially appear much more opaque and
intellectually demanding that it actually is,
The Rite
is a strangely tense and compelling film, with a mischievous note of black comedy
running all the way through. It explores some intriguing themes and, whilst
it may not be Bergman's most accessible film, it is every bit as fascinating and thought-provoking
as some of his more celebrated works.
© James Travers 2007
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Next Ingmar Bergman film:
Cries and Whispers (1972)
Film Synopsis
Three members of a theatrical troupe are brought before a judge, charged with committing
some unspecified act of obscenity. Hans, the troupe leader, is the most mature and
restrained of the three actors. Thea is his wife, a neurotic who is having an affair
with the third member of the group, Sebastian. It is the latter who is the most
dangerous and unpredictable of the three - impulsive, lustful, indebted, and contemptuous
of everyone and everything. In an attempt to get to the truth, Judge Abrahamson
questions each of the actors, but these interviews merely cause him to look inwards on
his own life. In judging them, he realises he is judging himself...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.