Ullman isn't particularly interested in the angst of human interaction or the difficulty of knowing truth; she seems fascinated by the pathos of feelings that are all the more intense for being of questionable integrity.
Private Confessions (1996)
Tomatometer
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Reviews Counted:15
Fresh:12
Rotten:3
Average Rating:6.9/10
Runtime: 2 hrs 7 mins
Genre: Foreign Films
US Box Office: $0
Synopsis: The autobiographical story of Ingmar Bergman's parents: his passionate but isolated mother Anna, and his stern, moral father Henrik--a Lutheran minister, and their icy marriage. Presented out of... The autobiographical story of Ingmar Bergman's parents: his passionate but isolated mother Anna, and his stern, moral father Henrik--a Lutheran minister, and their icy marriage. Presented out of sequence as five conversations, the Bergman penned script is beautifully directed and photographed by his protegees Liv Ullman and Sven Nykvist. [More]
Starring: Pernilla August, Max von Sydow, Samuel Froler, Anita Bjork
Starring: Pernilla August, Max von Sydow, Samuel Froler, Anita Bjork
Director: Liv Ullmann
Director: Liv Ullmann
Screenwriter: Ingmar Bergman
Producer: Ingrid Dahlberg
Composer: J.S. Bach
Reviews for Private Confessions
Each sequence is introduced by an intertitle suggesting it will contain an isolated conversation, an archly inaccurate notion that deepens the drama by appearing to deny its complexity.
The sight of von Sydow vomiting up a communion wafer is a pretty good indication that age hasn't mellowed the master one whit.
Ullmann handles the rich material with simplicity and feeling, using snatches of classical music only sparingly and concentrating on the faces of her exemplary cast.
The actors clearly respond, August conveying the turmoil of a woman trapped by circumstances and her own febrile emotions, Sydow a figure of towering moral authority and compassion.
Coming from the master's hand, the result is unique, akin to a deep plunge into a northern lake -- there's a chilling clarity to the experience, a harsh beauty that's softened, yet never redeemed, by unexpected pockets of relative warmth.
It works, and works beautifully, principally because of an outstanding performance by Ms. August.
I doubt that Bergman's script would have made much of a film even if he had directed it himself, but it might have been less confused.
Bergman may have withdrawn from film direction, but his presence is deeply felt in Private Confessions.
Private Confessions achieves an enveloping intensity that goes well beyond its occasionally literal and earnest approach.
It's the next best thing to Bergman -- a thoughtful, if slightly long drama enlivened by warm performances and some thoughtful meditations on the subject of adultery.
The reward for a pace that's sometimes frustratingly slow is in seeing truths and levels of emotion that are rarely captured on screen.
A film like Private Confessions makes most films about romance look like films about plumbing.
Von Sydow is magisterial. His gaunt face and rumbling voice have become, for me, impossible to distinguish from Bergman's own.
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