The Last ... — Ingmar Bergman: The Life And Films Of
Perhaps his most iconic image—a knight playing chess with Death on a desolate beach. It asked the question that would haunt all his work: If God is silent, how do we find meaning?
Intended as his swan song, this lush, semi-autobiographical epic blended the magical realism of childhood with the harshness of reality, winning four Academy Awards. The "Last" of a Kind Ingmar Bergman: The Life and Films of the Last ...
When he passed away in 2007 (on the same day as Michelangelo Antonioni), it felt like the closing of a chapter. He left behind a legacy that taught filmmakers like Woody Allen and Francis Ford Coppola that a movie could be as complex as a novel and as personal as a prayer. Perhaps his most iconic image—a knight playing chess
A psychological thriller that dissolved the boundary between two women’s identities. It pushed cinema into a modernist frontier, using close-ups to map the "geography of the human face." The "Last" of a Kind When he passed