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Wild Strawberries
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Directed by Ingmar Bergman.
After exploring his disillusionment with religion in his previous films, Ingmar Bergman adopted a humanistic approach for this classic study in isolationism. Legendary Scandinavian director Victor Sjöström stars as Isak Borg, an aging medical professor who reassesses his life while journeying to his former university to receive an honorary degree. Borg travels with his estranged daughter-in-law Marianne (Ingrid Thulin) and revisits many of the landmarks of his past, conjuring up memories of his family and of his onetime sweetheart Sara (Bibi Andersson). Returning to the present, he meets a teenage girl who resembles the long-departed Sara. She hitches a ride with the professor and Marianne, as do a ceaselessly bickering married couple. These new characters eventually become intertwined with Borg's hazy flashbacks and fantasies, as the old man recalls the disappointments and disillusionments that have left him cold and guilt-ridden, attributes emphasized when he encounters his equally cold and resentful son. Bookending Borg's odyssey of self-discovery are a series of symbolic images at the beginning of the film (a clock without hands, a man without a face) and a hauntingly beautiful finale, in which professor is beckoned back to the "perfect" world he left behind so many years earlier. This classic art movie remains one of Bergman's most accessible films and one of the most influential European art movies of its generation. Its intense focus on one man's thoughts, regrets, and memories set the tone for innumerable psychological character studies in its wake. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
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dibotdibot Wild Strawberries for Old Men
by dibot in dibot Blog
loved it.
Was this review helpful? [Be the first to tell us!]
"Wild Strawberries is the third film in the filmspotting Ingmar Bergman ("Saraband") marathon. And it's my new favorite of his films. Though the themes are sometimes heavy, an aging professor realizes that his life is empty, there is often humor and the characters are engaging. Throughout the film, the professor is haunted by troubling dreams, and these make me long for a Bergman horror movie. Though the episodes are short, they are unbelievable spooky and the cinematography gorgeous and frightening at the same time.No Country for Old Men is a shoo-in for a Best Picture Nomination, if not the win. The story follows Josh Brolin ("American Gangster)'s Llewelyn Moss as he stumbles across and drug deal gone bad and a lot of money. He is then stalked by Javier Bardem ("Love in the Time of Cholera")'s Anton Chigurh, a hitman determined to recover the money. And that's just the barest of outlines. The acting in this is amazing, especially Bardem who ... " [More]
circuitsnakecircuitsnake A Great Trip Down the Road
by circuitsnake in circuitsnake Blog
loved it.
1 out of 1 people found this review helpful. [What do you think?]
"While watching Wild Strawberries the other night I began to come to a realization. I was watching a road trip movie. But like most Bergman movies, there is so much more to it. I'll admit it, I'm not the biggest fan of Persona, I think it has some excellent moments (hottest sex scene in a film has no sex at all), but as an overall film I found it lacking. Wild Strawberries is fantastic.The film starts off slow, at first I found the opening narration filled with exposition, I understood the man was lonely, I get it. Let's move on. You do not really get how misunderstood this man is until we start his journey. How he is haunted by dreams and memories of the past, which I never really understood until he visited his 94-year-old mother. I truly enjoyed watching this character's immense amount of history. That being said, it is a road-trip movie and I've always had something against road-trip movies. Perhaps it is because the concept is simple "a character or a n ... " [More]
chesterfilmschesterfilms Dreams
by chesterfilms in chesterfilms Blog
loved it.
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"Wild Strawberries has a heaviness to it, but I find it very hopeful. This whole film is like a dream to me. I think the opening sequence sets the tone nicely. We weave in and out of that dream mode throughout the whole film. Even when Isak is not really dreaming, we are seeing his memories. He sees what he has become and he does not like it. Unlike A Christmas Carrol, Isak does not do a 180, but I do feel that he finds some sort of redemption. There are things in life that no matter what, will not change. Bergman is not one to give us happy endings, but this is as close as we will get. " [More]
Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
loved it.
Smultronstället/Wild Strawberries is one of the masterpieces of world cinema, a key early representative of the European art films that would change how people thought about movies in the late 1950s and 1960s. While the film posits a frightening questioning of life, it ultimately offers hope and redemption to its dying protagonist, and ultimately to us all. Director Ingmar Bergman effectively alternates emotional warmth with coldness to create one of the screen's greatest philosophical character studies. His shot composition is remarkable, particularly his close-ups of legendary Swedish director Victor Sjöström, here playing the dying professor. The film is full of masterful symbolic imagery and allegorical storytelling. Most important, Bergman makes his film accessible to the ordinary viewer. This is a warm and human film, strongly filled with a richness rarely experienced on screen. ~ Richard Gilliam, All Movie Guide
 



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