Film Review
The late 1970s was a difficult period for Ingmar Bergman. Accused of tax evasion
by the Swedish authorities, the director went into exile in West Germany, where he continued
directing and writing screenplays for cinema. It was during this period that
Bergman made what is widely accepted as his weakest film,
The
Serpent's Egg, a Kafka-esque thriller set during the turbulent German autumn of
1923, in the days leading up to Hitler's failed putsch. It was Bergman's second
English language film - after
The Touch (1971).
The main reason for the film's failure was the incompatibility of styles of director
Ingmar Bergman and producer Dino de Laurentiis. Whereas Bergman's expertise was
with very focussed films involving a small number of inward-looking characters in a constrained
setting, what De Laurentiis had in mind was the Hollywood blockbuster vision, with spectacular
sets, a sprawling narrative and larger-than-life characters. Given the magnitude
of the difference in their approaches, it's surprising that
The
Serpent's Egg isn't a lot worse than it is. Bergman regarded the film as
one of his biggest disappointments, and it certainly does not compare favourably with
most of his other work.
The Serpent's Egg
is not classic Bergman, but it is a strangely compelling film, in spite of its faults.
The rambling nature and apparent lack of logic in the storyline are irritating at first,
but out of this chaos there gradually emerges some kind of coherence, and the film ends
on a note of brilliance. It's a pity that the performances are almost universally
bad (thanks largely some very shoddy dialogue) - Bergman enthusiasts will be appalled
to see what he does with Liv Ullmann in this film - but, strangely, the hammed-up acting
seems in keeping with the sinister Grand Guignol feel of the film.
What the film
does convey, rather well, is a world that is slowly degenerating into an almost Medieval
vision of Hell, as adverse economic and political circumstances take their toll.
As the pillars of civilisation begin to crumble, as the veils of civilisation are stripped
away, human nature is exposed as something weak and ugly. In contrast to all of
Bergman's other films, where an individual or small group of individuals are tormented
by some terrible crisis, here the whole world seems to be caught in the maelstrom, and
notions of normality and morality become almost irrelevant.
The world that Bergman
shows us is very plausibly the world that made Hitler's rise to power, World War II and
the Holocaust inevitable. A country with mass unemployment, crippling war reparations
and a weak government of old men with no vision - the perfect incubator for the most venomous
serpent the world has known. What Friedrich Nietzsche foresaw in his 1880s
work
Thus Spoke Zarathustra became horrible reality
in Germany of the 1930s. Despite its many failings, the film does get the
historical perspective more or less right, and it leaves us with a chilling thought -
if the world drives one country to the brink of anarchy, then the world should be ready
for the consequences.
© James Travers 2007
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Next Ingmar Bergman film:
Autumn Sonata (1978)
Film Synopsis
In November 1923, American Jew Abel Rosenberg finds himself in Berlin. He is alone,
unemployed, and finding it hard to keep his grip on reality, in a country that is heading
for political and economic meltdown. He was a famous trapeze artist, but now his
partner Max is dead, driven to suicide. Abel hooks up with Max's wife, Manuela,
a prostitute and cabaret performer, but then finds himself suspected of perpetrating a
series of bizarre killings. Can there be any connection with Max's death...?
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.