4.6 • 978 Ratings
🗓️ 19 October 2023
⏱️ 49 minutes
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In the 1000th edition of In Our Time, Melvyn Bragg and guests discuss arguably the most celebrated film of the Swedish director Ingmar Bergman (1918-2007). It begins with an image that, once seen, stays with you for the rest of your life: the figure of Death playing chess with a Crusader on the rocky Swedish shore. The release of this film in 1957 brought Bergman fame around the world. We see Antonius Block, the Crusader, realising he can’t beat Death but wanting to prolong this final game for one last act, without yet knowing what that act might be. As he goes on a journey through a plague ridden world, his meeting with a family of jesters and their baby offers him some kind of epiphany.
With
Jan Holmberg Director of the Ingmar Bergman Foundation, Stockholm
Claire Thomson Professor of Cinema History and Director of the School of European Languages, Culture and Society at University College London
And
Laura Hubner Professor of Film at the University of Winchester
Producer: Simon Tillotson
Reading list:
Alexander Ahndoril (trans. Sarah Death), The Director (Granta, 2008)
Ingmar Bergman (trans. Marianne Ruuth), Images: My Life in Film (Faber and Faber, 1995)
Ingmar Bergman (trans. Joan Tate), The Magic Lantern: An Autobiography (Viking, 1988)
Ingmar Bergman (trans. Joan Tate), The Best Intentions (Vintage, 2018)
Ingmar Bergman (trans. Joan Tate), Sunday’s Children (Vintage, 2018)
Ingmar Bergman (trans. Joan Tate), Private Confessions (Vintage, 2018)
Stig Björkman, Torsten Manns and Jonas Sima (trans. Paul Britten Austin), Bergman on Bergman: Interviews with Ingmar Bergman (Da Capo Press, 1993)
Melvyn Bragg, The Seventh Seal: BFI Film Classics (British Film Institute, 1993)
Paul Duncan and Bengt Wanselius (eds.), The Ingmar Bergman Archives (Taschen/Max Ström, 2018)
Erik Hedling (ed.), Ingmar Bergman: An Enduring Legacy (Lund University Press, 2021)
Laura Hubner, The Films of Ingmar Bergman: Illusions of Light and Darkness (Palgrave Macmillan, 2007)
Daniel Humphrey, Queer Bergman: Sexuality, Gender, and the European Art Cinema (University of Texas Press, 2013)
Maaret Koskinen (ed.), Bergman Revisited: Performance, Cinema, and the Arts (Wallflower Press, 2008)
Selma Lagerlöf (trans. Peter Graves), The Phantom Carriage (Norvik Press, 2011)
Mariah Larsson and Anders Marklund (eds.), Swedish Film: An Introduction and Reader (Nordic Academic Press, 2010)
Paisley Livingston, Ingmar Bergman and the Rituals of Art (Cornell University Press, 2019)
Birgitta Steene (ed.), Focus on The Seventh Seal (Prentice Hall, 1972)
Birgitta Steene, Ingmar Bergman: A Reference Guide (Amsterdam University Press, 2014)
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0:38.0 | This is in our time from BBC Radio 4 and this is one of the thousand episodes you can find on BBC Sounds and on our |
0:45.1 | website. If you scroll down the page for this edition you find a reading list to go |
0:49.7 | with it. I hope you enjoy the program. Hello it's an image that once you've seen it stays with you for the rest of your life. |
0:57.0 | This is death, playing chess with the crusader on the rocky Swedish shore, |
1:02.0 | and it's the opening of Inmark Bergman's film The Seventh Seal |
1:05.4 | which from its release in 1957 brought Bergman fame around the world. |
1:11.1 | The crusader learns he can't beat death, but hopes to prolong this final game for one last act, |
1:17.0 | without yet knowing what that act might be, and we go with him on this journey in a plague-ridden world where you can burn women as |
1:23.6 | witches. We need to discuss the seventh seal on our one thousandth edition have |
1:28.0 | been our time are Claire Thompson, Professor of Cinema History and Director of the |
1:32.0 | School of European Languages Culture and Society at the University of London. |
1:36.0 | Laura Humner, Professor of Film at the University of Winchester, |
1:40.0 | and Jan Holmberg, Director of the Ingleburgman Foundation in Stockholm. |
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