The Silence (1963)
Directed by Ingmar Bergman

Drama
aka: Tystnaden

Film Review

Abstract picture representing The Silence (1963)
The Silence is easily one of Ingmar Bergman's darkest, most disturbing and most ambiguous films.  It was also one of his biggest commercial successes - on account of its explicit sex scenes which, at the time, were rather daring, although by today's standards they are pretty tame.  The film is usually considered as the third part in a trilogy of films which includes Through a Glass Darkly and Winter Light.  The connection between the three films is tenuous, although they are stylistically very similar.  The first film shows a world in which God is revealed, the second a world in which God is hidden.  The third film, The Silence, shows us a world without God - a world in which human beings appear to have lost their soul and are driven by selfish desires that ultimately lead them to Hell or extinction.

Bergman himself was not happy with the trilogy notion.  It probably makes more sense to consider The Silence alongside his later film Persona .  The two films are strikingly similar, both dealing with a complex intimate relationship between two physically similar female characters.  In Persona , these two women ultimately appear to merge into a single identity, whereas in The Silence, the women seem to be in a process of divergence, in the end becoming totally separated.  In the two films, the two women are two contrasting aspects of the same individual - the spiritual and the earthy, the soul and the flesh.  The dichotomy is emphasised by Sven Nykvist's high contrast photography - light and shade as clearly delineated as the characters in the film, representing the two essential components of our universe, the good and the bad.

The problem of communication lies at the heart of many of Bergman's films, but in The Silence it is fundamental.  Not only do the two principal characters find it increasingly difficult to talk to one another (their erstwhile incestuous affair having turned to mutual loathing), but they seem completely cut off from the world around them.  They are in a strange country whose language they do not recognise, with whose people they cannot communicate.  They are alone, in the truest sense of the world - beings without purpose in a Godless cosmos.

The only character who can bridge the gap between the two women, and also between them and the outside world, is the small boy Johan.  He has a knack of empathising with everyone he encounters.  Johan is wise beyond his years, being aware of the angst that not being able to communicate causes, as he shows in the poignant Punch and Judy scene.  Without communication, there is no understanding.  Without understanding, there is fear.  And fear leads to war - a point that is driven home in the sequence where Johan witnesses a seemingly endless line of tanks from a train window at the start of the film.  Interestingly, the actor who plays Johan, Jörgen Lindström, would appear in the opening sequence to Persona - an indication, perhaps, that Bergman intended us to make a connection between these two films.

The symmetry between The Silence and Persona is far from perfect - it is broken most visibly by the absence of an intermediary (or translator)  in the latter film.   The Johan of The Silence becomes the memory of a dead child in Persona.  Just as Winter Light is the antithesis of Through a Glass Darkly, Persona and The Silence also form a pair, showing us two distinct sides of human experience - love beginning, love ending; an identity repaired, an identity fractured;  unity and separation.
© James Travers 2007
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Next Ingmar Bergman film:
All These Women (1964)

Film Synopsis

Whilst travelling by train in a foreign country, a young woman named Ester suddenly falls ill.  With her companions - sister Anna and young nephew Johan - she stops at a hotel.  Whilst Esther is bed-ridden, Anna goes out to explore the town and indulge her carnal appetites, leaving Johan to roam about the hotel.  When she learns what her sister has been up to, Esther is devastated.  Since childhood, Anna has been her entire life...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.


Film Credits

  • Director: Ingmar Bergman
  • Script: Ingmar Bergman
  • Cinematographer: Sven Nykvist
  • Music: Ivan Renliden
  • Cast: Ingrid Thulin (Ester), Gunnel Lindblom (Anna), Birger Malmsten (The Bartender), Håkan Jahnberg (The Waiter), Jörgen Lindström (Johan), Lissi Alandh (Woman in Variety Hall), Karl-Arne Bergman (The Paperboy), Leif Forstenberg (Man in Variety Hall), Eduardo Gutiérrez (Impressario), Eskil Kalling (The Bar Owner), Birger Lensander (The Doorkeeper), Kristina Olausson (Anna), Nils Waldt (The Cashier), Olof Widgren (The Old Man)
  • Country: Sweden
  • Language: Swedish / English / German / French / Spanish
  • Support: Black and White
  • Runtime: 96 min
  • Aka: Tystnaden

The best of British film comedies
sb-img-15
British cinema excels in comedy, from the genius of Will Hay to the camp lunacy of the Carry Ons.
The brighter side of Franz Kafka
sb-img-1
In his letters to his friends and family, Franz Kafka gives us a rich self-portrait that is surprisingly upbeat, nor the angst-ridden soul we might expect.
The best films of Ingmar Bergman
sb-img-16
The meaning of life, the trauma of existence and the nature of faith - welcome to the stark and enlightening world of the world's greatest filmmaker.
Kafka's tortuous trial of love
sb-img-0
Franz Kafka's letters to his fiancée Felice Bauer not only reveal a soul in torment; they also give us a harrowing self-portrait of a man appalled by his own existence.
The greatest French Films of all time
sb-img-4
With so many great films to choose from, it's nigh on impossible to compile a short-list of the best 15 French films of all time - but here's our feeble attempt to do just that.
 

Other things to look at


Copyright © frenchfilms.org 1998-2024
All rights reserved



All content on this page is protected by copyright