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Synopsis

Legendary director Ingmar Bergman creates a testament to the strength of the soul—and a film of absolute power. Karin and Maria come to the aid of their dying sister, Agnes, but jealousy, manipulation, and selfishness come before empathy. Agnes, tortured by cancer, transcends the pettiness of her sisters’ concerns to remember moments of being—moments that Bergman, with the help of Academy Award–winning cinematographer Sven Nykvist, translates into pictures of staggering beauty and unfathomable horror. —The Criterion Collection

Director

Ingmar_bergman

Ingmar Bergman

The most famed and honored filmmaker ever to emerge from the nation of Sweden – and regarded by many as one of the three or four most brilliant directors of the 20th century – Ingmar Bergman radically altered the nature and meaning of the motion-picture form, transfiguring a medium long devoted to spectacle into an art capable of profoundly personal meditations into the myriad struggles facing the psyche and the soul. By focusing on the exploration of self with unparalleled intensity, Bergman brought to the screen a new sense of emotional intimacy, fusing the concepts behind Freudian psychotherapy with a dreamlike sensibility founded on visual metaphors, flashbacks, and extreme close-ups to create a revelatory cinematic world unlike any before it.

Born Ernst Ingmar Bergman on July 14, 1918, in Uppsala, Sweden, he followed a brief 1938 military stay by attending Stockholm University. While there, he staged his first plays, among them adaptations of Macbeth, August Strindberg’s… read more

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Evan

17Jan10

Both Nykvist and Bergman are two figures who absolutely deserve the description of having such a painterly approach to their work. Cries and Whispers is the third Bergman that I've seen (after Seventh Seal, Fanny and Alexander), and it is the first to really make me aware of this fact. It's annoying that such a memorably beautiful film has been released with such a lacking cover design (by Criterion standards).  
Picture of Stephen Kahn

Stephen Kahn

12Jan10

One of the most disturbing and strikingly beautiful films I have ever seen, it is one of Ingmar Bergman's best. The plot is so simple, yet endlessly deep, thanks to the stellar acting of Liv Ullman, Harriet Andersson, and Ingrid Thulin. If only they made movies like this today.  
Picture of Telmo

Telmo

22Nov09

Breathtaking. An absolute masterpiece. One of the best movies I've ever seen, and one of the reasons (among many) why Bergman is my favorite director.  
Picture of pober157

pober157

29Oct09

This is one of those pictures where you cannot, no matter how hard you want to, look away, blink, or breath. Completely shattering.  

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Reviews

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Untitled

By J. Ridicul​ous on June 8, 2009

It is like no other film he made before, but Cries and Whispers is one of Bergman’s great masterpieces, a tale of two sisters watching over a third while she dies of womb cancer, helped by a servant…  read review

Untitled

By tom joad on April 4, 2009

I feel unraveled and penetrated. How Bergman can create a film of such subjective, horrific matter – and be complimented with such astounding, psychotic performances from the actresses – I know not…  read review

Untitled

By Jordan H on December 29, 2008

An terrifying ode, in red, to the soul. Bergman’s imagery here is nearly assaulting at times. In plunging headlong into the spiritual, it’s easy to draw what you want from it, but even still, there’s…  read review

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Bergman vs. Godard

144 posts by 65 people 19 days ago

DVD

Buy the DVD from The Criterion Collection.