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Category:    Home > Reviews > Drama > Illness > Family > Oppression > Death > Existentialism > Spirituality > Sexuality > Sweden > Journey > Cries and Whispers (1972/Criterion Blu-ray)/A Spell To Wart Off The Darkness (2013/KimStim DVD)

Cries and Whispers (1972/Criterion Blu-ray)/A Spell To Wart Off The Darkness (2013/KimStim DVD)


Picture: B/C+ Sound: B-/C Extras: B/C- Films: B+/C+



Here are two films that understand the link between silence, visuals and pure cinema, one of which is a major classic...



Ingmar Bergman's Cries and Whispers (1972) was a new direction for the legendary Swedish director to take after he had a few films that had not had the critical and art house-commercial success of some of his last few films. It had been a few years since Persona (1966) and Hour Of The Wolf (1968), but this brutally honest tale of a sister dying the the family home of several sisters who are having more than a seriously difficult time with death and the return of the repressed was a great return to form and triumph for Bergman. Criterion has issued the film in an incredible Blu-ray edition.


Agnes (Harriett Andersson) is suffering from cancer and is not going to be recovering from the illness, just getting slowly, graphically worse, which her two sisters Maria (Liv Ullman) and Karin (Ingrid Thulin) are there for her, though it starts affecting them, the rest of the family and even their maid. We see love, anger, hate, snobbery, arrogance, ignorance and inhumanity as the characters interact and deal with all kinds of factors hey cannot control or even handle very well, with some of the results being sad and some very ugly.


This is a brutally honest film made by mature adults for mature adults that remains a career high for all involved. It has actually become better with age, ageless in some respects and makes for compelling viewing from start to finish. Sadly, Bergman would only make a few more feature films (despite doing all kinds of television in the same period) and it remains something very special worth going out of your way for, but expect the unexpected.


Extras include a thick paper pullout on the film including informative text and an essay by film scholar Emma Wilson, while the Blu-ray adds a 2001 introduction by Bergman, new interview with actor Harriet Andersson, conducted by film scholar Peter Cowie, new video essay on the film's visuals by filmmaker : : kogonada called On Solace, behind-the-scenes footage with commentary by Cowie, Ingmar Bergman: Reflections on Life, Death, and Love with Erland Josephson (2000, 52 minutes), an interview with Bergman and his longtime collaborator and the Original Theatrical Trailer.



Needless to day it is not easy to tell a story in images and especially now more than ever, silence. This is also what Ben Rivers and Ben Russell try in A Spell To Wart Off The Darkness (2013) with a lone, unidentified man traveling in the middle of nowhere, finding nature, eventually people doing different things (like a Heavy Metal group doing swordplay) and other abstract moments make this at least ambitious in the fact it tries to get the viewer to break with the rapid pace of an increasingly technologized world. However, this becomes disjoined, has only limited points, sometimes seemed unlikely and for being writerly, did not stay with me.


Still, if you are curious about this kind of cinema, and it is cinema, then you'll want to see it. Otherwise, you might not be so amused.


Extras include a Director's Notes section inside the paper sleeve in the cover and a short the duo made called Call No Man Happy Until He Is Dead aka Vikings which is along the lines of the feature here.



The 1080p 1.66 X 1 digital High Definition image transfer on Cries looks incredibly good, especially since Bergman uses red and that is the toughest color in HD, but this 2K scan form the original 35mm camera negative makes the film look as great as it ever has outside of the best 35mm and 16mm film prints. This is some of Director of Photography Sven Nykvist's greatest camerawork and the advanced use of color is still amazing to this day. The anamorphically enhanced 1.85 X 1 image on Spell is nicely shot for a new, naturalistic shoot, but is a little soft throughout.


The PCM 1.0 Mono on Cries comes from its 17.5mm magnetic soundmaster sounding just fine throughout for a quiet film that has its share of music, talk and sound effects. I cannot imagine it sounding any better. The lossy Dolby Digital 5.1 on Spell is very underused to the point that you might think the sound is missing like a defect from the DVD, but it is there. Just don't expect much activity and be careful of volume switching and high playback levels.



- Nicholas Sheffo


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