VL 'Stokely's dog' 49.1
Robin Landseadel
robinlandseadel at comcast.net
Mon Dec 15 18:49:40 CST 2008
I've seen a lot of Bergman. Have you ever seen what Bergman did with
Mozart's "Magic Flute?" One of my all-time faves and every bit as
mannered as "Vineland."
I do love "Smiles of a Summer Night" and the way it echos some of Jean
Renoir's pastoral work. Bergman's little seen "The Magician" manages
to echo some of the dark themes about faith in "Seventh Seal" but is
altogether different.
Similar, perhaps with lines that lead more towards "Against the Day,"
Bergman's "Fanny & Alexander" manages to be both more monumental and
in some way more personal and bound up with memory, time and the not-
so distant past than "Seventh Seal" and "Persona."
Thanks for chiming in, Henry. It would be a pity if all that Pynchon
came up with was Gravity's Rainbow, great as it is.
On Dec 15, 2008, at 3:58 PM, Henry wrote:
> Have you ever seen Bergman's "Smiles of a Summer Night?" Not as
> long or as
> "heavy" as Personna or The Seventh Seal, but it's beautiful
> nonetheless.
> It's like comparing a quartet to a symphony, they may be the same
> length,
> but while the density of and width of a quartet may be less, it's
> height may
> surpass many orchestral works.
>
> http://tinyurl.com/bergman-on-amazon
. . .like, say, Beethoven's 14 quartet in c-sharp minor---one of his
peaks.
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