Film Review
The Passion of Anna completes a loose trilogy
of films in which director Ingmar Bergman examines how external factors can influence
a person's psychology and result in the break-up of a close male-female relationship.
It follows the expressionistic
Hour of the Wolf (1968) and the wartime drama
Shame
(1968), with Max von Sydow and Liv Ullmann playing the lead characters in all
three films. Each of the films continues Bergman's exploration of existentialist
themes - the nature of identity, the meaning of reality and the difficulty of living in
a world filled with irreconcilable contradictions.
Stylistically, these three films could hardly be more different. Whereas the
first two are filmed in high-contrast black-and-white and have a grim claustrophobic intensity,
The Passion of Anna is shot in colour and feels
much looser, less confined, and far more naturalistic. However, the similarities
between the films are as striking as the differences and lead one to conjecture that they
depict not three separate stories, but the same story, seen from three different perspectives.
One possible clue to the relationship between the films is in the inclusion in
The
Passion of Anna of a short sequence from
Shame
to represent part of a dream. The hint is there that, perhaps, the
whole of
Shame is a dream, or maybe a twisted
reinterpretation of the world as seen by Anna.
Mental derangement features heavily
in all three films, and in each film Liv Ullmann plays a character who is either obviously
unhinged or else looking as if she might be teetering on the brink of insanity. Assuming
that Ulmann's character is the linchpin to each film, it is plausible that what the films
are showing are a single mind that is fragmenting into various pseudo-realities - states
that exist between reality and imagination. For this character, reality as we know
it (or rather, as we
think we know it) has ceased
to have any meaning.
A more evident connection between the films is the idea that
an individual's identity can be strongly affected by external forces. In
Hour
of the Wolf, it is the bleak, solitary landscape in which the story takes place
which results in the mental collapse of the main protagonist. In
Shame
, the experience of war completely changes the way a husband and wife behave towards
one another, ultimately ruining their relationship. In
The
Passion of Anna, it is the senseless killing of livestock by an unknown maniac
that leads to the breakdown in trust and affection between Andreas and Anna.
The
idea that external factors help to shape our personalities is not new to the science of
psychology. The traumas we experience in life can be ascribed, at least in part,
to the conflict between two halves of our being - an inner self which is immutable and
an outer shell that is constantly being moulded by external influences. This
idea, that every individual has not one single identity but is in fact a composite of
two distinct entities (the static interior and malleable exterior), is one which recurs
a great deal in Bergman's work - most apparently in
The Silence (1963) and
Persona (1966).
Although
The
Passion of Anna is the least structured of the three films - it lacks the narrative
cohesion of its two predecessors and makes use of some slightly misjudged deconstruction
devices (such as narrative breaks in which the actors talk about their characters) - it
is probably the most effective in expressing what Bergman had intended. There is
certainly a very distinct change in technique and emphasis from what went before - a prelude
to the intense psychological dramas that were to follow, namely
Cries and Whispers (1972) and
Scenes from a Marriage (1973).
Whilst
it explores some dauntingly complex themes,
The Passion
of Anna is strangely one of Bergman's most alluring films. Sven Nykvist's
achingly beautiful colour photography captures the savage splendour of the island of Fårö,
a potent visual metaphor for the unfathomable forces that take possession of the protagonists
in this unpredictable emotional drama. Add to that some mesmeric performances
- Bibi Andersson and Erland Josephson making an effective contrast with Max von Sydow
and Liv Ullmann - and the result is one of Bergman's most compelling and revealing explorations
of the human psyche.
© James Travers 2007
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Next Ingmar Bergman film:
The Rite (1969)