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It’s difficult for any review to do justice to Igmar Bergman’s most personal and mind blowing film, “Persona.” It is quite simply one of the most 
sublime, profound, and poetic films in the history of cinema.
 
 It will be shown on Friday, Sep 7th at 4:15pm, Saturday, September 8th at 
3:30pm, and Wednesday, Sep 12th at 6:15pm at the Gene Siskel Center as part of 
the Bergman 100 series. The center’s brochure described the series as “a 
centenary celebration of the Swedish director who for many filmgoers epitomized 
the cinema's potential as a serious art form.” It will be shown in Swedish with 
English sub-titles.
 
 Persona was originally released in 1966 in Europe and in 1967 in America. It 
opened to almost tremendous, nearly universal critical acclaim. For many years, 
the film was routinely listed as one of the 10 greatest films ever made in all 
the most important film polls including the prestigious Sight and Sound poll. 
When I was asked to do a list/ ranking of the greatest films ever by the One 
Sentence Review website, I put Persona down as the second greatest film ever 
after A Touch of Evil (the director’s cut).
 See: 
https://1linereview2.blogspot.com/2009/06/vittorio-carli.html
 
 Through the early ‘70s, a majority of international film critics considered 
Bergman to be a supreme film maker on the same level or greater than Hitchcock 
and/or Welles. Bergman was championed by the auteur critics who judged works in 
comparison to other works by the same author/creator.
But then a huge paradigm shift occurred in film study. By the mid ‘70s,many critics had switched to genre criticism which examines films in relation to other films of the same type.
 
 Bergman’s works don’t really fit well into any traditional Hollywood genres 
(although most of his film are art films), so there was a huge backlash against 
him which he still has not fully recovered from. Many of the newer critics 
considered Bergman’s works to be too literary, abstract, stagy, and 
self-indulgent. As a consequence Bergman’s work has been undervalued in the last 
few decades. But many later major directors such as Robert Altman, David Lynch, 
Steven Cederberg, David Fincher, Lars Von Trier, and Woody Allen continued to 
draw from his work long after his death. Clearly, Lasse Hailstorm’s video for 
Abba’s 1977 hit “Knowing Me, Knowing You” is a complete homage to Persona, and 
it uses the exact same type of camera angles. See: 
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iUrzicaiRLU.
 
 “Persona” opens with an extraordinary and jarring montage which looks like it 
could’ve come from a French new wave. Bergman shows us a spider, dripping blood 
and a crucified Christ figure. All the images can be tied to the themes in the 
film, but none of them has only one all encompassing meaning or application. The 
spider image for instance may be foreshadowing Elizabet’s life sucking behavior 
and the Christ image can be tied to the innocent Alma’s ennobling suffering for 
another.
 
 While making the film, Bergman was heavily influenced by both psychoanalysis and 
the popular ‘60s literary philosophy, deconstruction, which was gaining 
attention when the film was being made. “Persona” deconstructs itself when we 
see actual film reels moving, reminding us of the film’s artificial 
construction. Here, Bergman is like a great magician showing us how his tricks 
are done
 
 The main story is heavily symbolic and at times it’s hard to decide
what is literally happening in the film.
 
 Alma, an apparently innocent and inexperienced nurse (Bibi Andersson) is ordered to care for a mysterious and Machiavellian actress 
named Elizabet (Liv Ulmann).
 
 Elizabet stopped talking completely after she ran off stage during her starring 
performance in “Elektra” which is about a daughter who hates
her mother and loves her father too much (it was the template for the Daredevil 
character with the same name). The play may have traumatized her into silence by 
reminding her of her of her own bad parenting.
 
 Elizabet bonds with Alma, when Alma tells a story about how she and
a strange woman spontaneously slept with two young strangers on the beach. Alma 
got pregnant. She was traumatized by the aftermath of the experience and this 
shows Elizabet they have more in common than she thought.
 
 The former Chicago Tribune critic, Michael Wilmington wrote a terrific essay 
which captures the scene’s erotic appeal, and it appears in the book, The X 
List.
 
 After awhile it becomes clear that the engaged Alma is falling for Elizabet. 
It’s debatable whether the attraction is merely psychological or physical as 
well. It is also unclear (at least initially) whether the affection is mutual.
 
 The film features two of the greatest performances by two of the finest film 
actresses. Bibi Andersson did many films with Bergman (she was mind bending-ly 
terrific in both The Seventh Seal and Wild Strawberries) and she also worked 
with other top rank film makers such as John Huston (The Kremlin Letter) and 
Robert Altman (Quintet).
 
 Liv Ulmann is a terrific actress and also a skillful director. She won a Golden 
Globe Award for Best Actress – Motion Picture for the film The Emigrants (1971), 
and has been nominated for another four. In 2000, she was nominated for the 
Palme d'Or for her second directorial feature film, Faithless, one of the best 
films of that year.
 
 The script for “Persona” was specially written to capitalize on the likeness of 
the two magnificent lead actresses. Bergman often shot them at an angle which 
made them indistinguishable from one another. As they get closer all the 
boundaries between them come down. In the film’s most astonishing shot, their 
images actually fuse, and they either physically or mentally become one person.
 
 Whether you love or hate Bergman, every serious cinema aficionado should see the 
film at least once. It’s probably best to see it first in the big screen, but 
the film gains power by seeing it over and over on DVD. I would recommend that 
serious film buffs see it on the big screen for the first time and then they 
should buy it to savor its brilliance over and over.
 
 “Persona” and many of Bergman’s other films try to accomplish the same thing as 
the world’s great religions. It struggles to reach the unknowable, the abstract 
and the transcendent. It comes closer to succeeding as any other film I have 
ever seen.
 
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