August 19, 2010

Death and All of His Friends

Gotta love the artsy, liberal, hipster school, don't ya? For this three week seminar I'm a part of before school actually begins for real, I am required to attend screenings of some pretty interesting movies. One of them was just weird and surreal, and, as such, I have nothing to say about it (The Spirit of the Beehive). The other I honestly slept through (Killer of Sheep). What? It's college. I have work and I'm staying up till one or two most nights. Don't lay judgement on me; you know you were the exact same way! But, I digress. Where were we? Oh, right. The third film that the L&T professors have required me to watch, so far, is a bonafide classic. Wonderfully grim, surprisingly funny, with solid acting and beautiful imagery to boot. This is one classic that deserves a look.

Death takes his chess very seriously!

The Seventh Seal concerns a man, Antonius Block, who has just returned to his country from the Crusades. He finds his homeland in disarray, ravaged by the Black Plague. Upon his return, he is greeted by Death, who has come to take him away. Block, not surprisingly, values his life, and strikes up a deal with Death. They will play chess, and if Block wins, he will go free. As Block and his squire trek across the land on their way home, meeting and interacting with various people, Death continues to appear, eager to continue the game! 

Oh, lordy, this is a good setup! I've always loved films that put Death as a character, and The Seventh Seal is the best of the bunch. The story is very interesting, always keeping you riveted to the characters and their plight. You know, going in, how it's going to end, and this sense of impending doom hangs over the whole movie, giving a gravitas few films have succeeded in emulating. 

Max von Sydow is Block! I'm not that familiar with Sydow's work, having been introduced to him when he looked like a crumpled piece of paper. That being said, he is quite amazing here, delivering a heartfelt and earnest performance. Block is clearly traumatized by what he experienced in the Crusades, and von Sydow does a great job conveying this to the audience without ever actually saying it. 

Gunnar Bjornstrand is Block's squire, Jans. His is more of the comic relief character, but that doesn't stop him from dropping some profound stuff every now and then. Bjornstrand does a great job laying off all the crazy characters he is forced to deal with, and effortlessly creates a portrait of an asshole that we can sympathize with. 

There are some minor characters who feature heavily in the movie, and they are all good, to be sure. But it is Bengt Ekerot who steals the show as Death. He is positively terrifying as the Grim Reaper, creating an antagonist to frighten even the hardest person. His personification has been mimicked countless times, and nearly all of them miss the mark. Ekerot is the quintessential Death. No one does it better!

Performances all around are excellent, but von Sydow stands out because he has the most to work with and does it the best. He is still overshadowed by Ekerot, though. I'm sorry! When you play Death that well, you will walk away with the movie. 

La la la la la!

This is the film that put master director Ingmar Bergman on the map! Bergman also wrote the script, so he already had a good grasp of the material going in, but it is amazing what he has done with The Seventh Seal. He does a great job handling his actors, letting them loose to explore the material, but always keeping them grounded in the reality of the situation! He sets up an atmosphere of despair and doom, and does a fantastic job of it. He even does a good job handling the bipolar aspects of the script. The films jumps around a lot in tone, from grim and depressing, to incredibly funny! There's a point to this. I just haven't figured out what it is yet. 

Now, despite this, that bipolar thing is the only glaring flaw that I can detect in the thing. You leave the movie feeling a little unsettled, not just because the thing you saw was incredibly dark, but because there were some moments where you could not stop laughing. I left asking myself, "Should I feel sad, or happy?" It's not necessarily a bad thing, just an unwelcome thing, if you ask me. 

But, that gripe is for naught, because the fact remains that The Seventh Seal is an awesome experience. I don't mean awesome in the "Woah! Did you see that explosion?" type of awesome. I mean it in the "Holy shit! This is such an amazing movie!" type of awesome! Awesome in the way Schindler's List was awesome, not the way The A-Team was awesome! Get me? Good. This is a masterful movie, one that will stick with you long after you finish it. It has great performances, an engrossing atmosphere, and the single greatest portrayal of Death ever put on screen. This is quite the little film! Check it out!



6 comments:

  1. This review makes me think about the nature of criticism and the way we write about classic movies. I'm not criticising your work because you have done your job, I'm just generalizing or even better yet, posing a question for debate. I'm curious if, when you take a film as iconic as this one, if writing a normal review of it is useful/all you need to do. By now the Seventh Seal is famous as more than just a film, it is discussed in terms of ideas, religion, as part of Bergman's entire career. By simplfying it down to the acting is good or watever if we say anything useful other than to let people know we've seen it? Again, not saying you've done anything wrong here. It's weird for me to read a normal "review" review of a Bergman film when he has so long been part of "criticism" reviwing. What do you think?

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  2. @Mike: Yeah, you bring up a good point! There's really nothing to be said on the film that hasn't already been said hundreds of times by hundreds of other people. I tried to say useful things, and I hope I accomplished that. I mean, I wanted to write a review of something, and this one was the one that stood out most in my mind of the films I had seen recently. But, I think that there's not much to gain from, as you say, "reviewing" the film as if it just came out.

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  3. Nice review!

    The one Death that I can think of who is better than Death in the Seven Seal is Terry Pratchett's, but I don't know if he's ever been in a movie.

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  4. Yeah, I slept through Killer of Sheep in college as well. :) I've been meaning to revisit it, though.

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  5. Nice review!

    The one Death that I can think of who is better than Death in the Seven Seal is Terry Pratchett's, but I don't know if he's ever been in a movie.

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  6. @Mike: Yeah, you bring up a good point! There's really nothing to be said on the film that hasn't already been said hundreds of times by hundreds of other people. I tried to say useful things, and I hope I accomplished that. I mean, I wanted to write a review of something, and this one was the one that stood out most in my mind of the films I had seen recently. But, I think that there's not much to gain from, as you say, "reviewing" the film as if it just came out.

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