A strongly mystery-denoting original Swedish poster for Ingmar Bergman's The Magician |
Dr. Vogler and his little troupe of con-men/magicians arrive in Södermalm, Sweden, in 1846, where they are confronted with the town's skeptical, haughty aristocrats.
The Magician is written and directed by Swedish master filmmaker Ingmar Bergman (Face to Face/Ansikte mot Ansikte (1976)) as his 20th theatrical feature. The original title translates to, 'the face'.
As the masks fall in the film's compelling story, The Magician turns into a trembling showdown between judgemental, proud, pompous science and the right to believe and believe in superstition. The final ribbon that ties the tale together is a most merry one. There is plenty of both wisdom and foolishness before this.
The Magician is simply composed over diametric opposites and done in a frank and open-minded style with delightful acting, - especially from Ingrid Thulin (Winter Light/Nattvardsgästerna (1963)) and the other women.
This vivid gem blends comedy, thriller aspects and philosophy with drama in an elegant and enthusiastic way. It is a treasure from one of Bergman's most productive years, 1958, in which he directed two feature films and two TV movies.
Related posts:
Ingmar Bergman: Fanny and Alexander/Fanny och Alexander (1982) - Bergman's treasured mammoth drama farewell
All These Women/Now About These Women/För att Inte Tala om Alla Dessa Kvinnor (1964) - Bergman's pitifully awful farce
Cost: Unknown
Box office: Unknown
= Uncertain
[The Magician was released 26 December (Sweden) and runs 107 minutes. The script was inspired by G.K. Chesterton's play Magic, which Bergman had previously staged. The film was shot in Stockholm, Sweden. It was chosen as Sweden's entry for the Oscars but didn't get nominated. It was nominated for a BAFTA and won 3 awards at the 1959 Venice Film Festival. Bergman returned with Storm Weather/Oväder (1960, TV movie) and theatrically with his masterpiece The Virgin Spring/Jungfrukällan (1960). Max Von Sydow (Dreamscape (1984)) returned in The Virgin Spring; Thulin in Älska (1959, TV movie), Vår Ofödde Son (1959, TV movie) and theatrically in The Judge/Domaren (1960); Gunnar Björnstrand (Taboo/Tabu (1977)) in Swinging at the Castle/Det Svänger på Slottet (1959); and Bibi Andersson (Drømspel (1994)) in Lilith (1959, TV movie) and theatrically in Den Kära Leken (1959). The Magician is fresh at 100 % with a 8.14/10 critical average at Rotten Tomatoes.]
What do you think of The Magician?
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