Film Review
Shame is possibly the closest that director Ingmar
Bergman came to making a political film, although its ambiguity provides ample scope for
interpretation and speculation as to what his intention was in making this film.
It's probable the film was inspired by the seemingly interminable war in Vietnam, the
most destructive conflict since the Second World War, noteworthy for its almost unimaginable
civilian death toll.
It's fair to regard
Shame as an anti-war
film, but with it's graphic depiction of the consequences of war it could hardly be regarded
in any other light. The film is far less concerned with the material damage that
war creates than with the devastating psychological impact on those who find themselves
caught up in it. Along with
The Seventh Seal (1957),
Wild Strawberries (1957) and
Winter Light (1962),
Shame
is a stark existentialist masterpiece which probes the very depths of the human
psyche, a work that no serious film enthusiast can afford to miss.
Liv Ullmann
and Max Von Sydow, two of Bergman's preferred actors and arguably the best in his small
repertory, play a married couple whose painful experiences of war provide the focus for
the film. At the start of the film, these characters are pretty well oblivious to
threat that is lurking over the horizon and naively believe that they can go on living
in their parochial retreat forever. When this illusion is shattered, it happens
spectacularly and they are suddenly catapulted into the midst of a trauma that soon becomes
a living Hell. It is then that the transformation begins. It's hard to be
indifferent to war when people start shooting at you.
Von Sydow's character, Jan,
is the one that undergoes the greatest change. At the outset of the conflict, he
is a snivelling coward who, like a small child, cannot accept what is happening.
Ullmann's character, Eva, is the stronger of the two at this stage, and shows far greater
resilience in the face of the growing threat. It's interesting that in most of Bergman's
films, it is the women characters who are the strongest, whereas men are often portrayed
as weak, vacillating and ineffective - a consequence perhaps of the director's experiences
as a child.
As things progress, as senseless destruction, degradation and brutality
are hammered into their minds and bodies, Jan and Eva develop further. They become
harder, more cynical, and the inevitable happens: they begin to hate one another.
The change is most noticeable in Jan who, the weaker and more pliant of the two characters,
is morphed from a spineless self-interested pacifist into an unfeeling, unsympathetic
brute who is capable of cold-blooded murder. It is a gradual process of dehumanisation
which stems from the most primitive of human needs - the need to survive and protect that
which is most precious.
Ironically, it is Jan's love for Eva that transforms him
into the pitiful creature that she can only hate, failing to see the transformation in
her own character. Although things seem to end well, with a reconciliation of sorts,
it is clear that something has been taken away. The experience of war has not only
destroyed their material world, it has irrevocably scarred their feelings for one another.
For them, the war has been like a torchlight that has revealed something of themselves
they would rather have kept locked away, and the shame of that will be bitterest legacy
of the war. For them, as for so many others, the war will never be over.
© James Travers 2007
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Next Ingmar Bergman film:
The Passion of Anna (1969)
Film Synopsis
Jan and Eva are two former concert musicians who have retired to a sparsely populated
island where they live a peaceful, uneventful life working on a remote farm. Their
isolation from the outside world keeps them in ignorance of an impending war - which suddenly
arrives on their door step, instantly upending their lives. As the warring factions
arrive on the island, bringing destruction and death in their wake, Jan and Eva are caught
in the crossfire, taunted by one side, then the other. Their struggle to survive
proves to be an ordeal that will change them forever...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.