Template:Short description Template:About Template:Use British English Template:Use dmy dates Template:Good article Template:Infobox film Cries and Whispers (Template:Langx) is a 1972 Swedish period drama film written and directed by Ingmar Bergman and starring Harriet Andersson, Kari Sylwan, Ingrid Thulin and Liv Ullmann. The film, set in a mansion at the end of the 19th century, is about three sisters and a servant who struggle with the terminal cancer of one of the sisters (Andersson). The servant (Sylwan) is close to her, while the other two sisters (Ullmann and Thulin) confront their emotional distance from each other.

Inspired by Bergman's mother, Karin Åkerblom, and his vision of four women in a red room, Cries and Whispers was filmed at Taxinge-Näsby Castle in 1971. Its themes include faith, the female psyche and the search for meaning in suffering, and academics have found Biblical allusions. Unlike previous Bergman films, it uses saturated colour, crimson in particular.

After its premiere in the United States, distributed by Roger Corman and New World Pictures, the film was released in Sweden and screened out of competition at the 1973 Cannes Film Festival. Following two unsuccessful films by Bergman, Cries and Whispers was a critical and commercial success. It received five Academy Award nominations, including one for Best Picture (rare for a foreign-language film). Cinematographer Sven Nykvist won the Academy Award for Best Cinematography, and Cries and Whispers won the Guldbagge Award for Best Film and other honours.

The film inspired stage adaptations by Ivo van Hove and Andrei Șerban and influenced later cinema. It was commemorated on Swedish postage stamps referring to a scene in which Andersson and Sylwan replicate the Pietà.

PlotEdit

In a large 19th-century mansion with red walls and carpets, Agnes is dying of uterine cancer.Template:Efn Her sisters, Maria and Karin, arrive at their childhood home and take turns with the maid, Anna, watching over Agnes. Anna, more religious than the sisters, prays after she lost her young daughter. When Agnes's doctor David visits, he sees his former lover Maria. Maria remembers their affair and her failed marriage with her husband Joakim, who stabbed himself non-fatally in response to the adultery. David tells her that she has become more indifferent. Agnes remembers their mother, who neglected and teased her and favoured Maria, with greater understanding and recalls sharing a moment of sorrow with her. While Agnes' sisters remain emotionally distant, Anna comforts the suffering Agnes by baring her breasts and holding her at night.

Agnes dies after a long period of suffering, and at her wake the priest says that her faith was stronger than his own. Maria tells Karin that it is unusual for them to avoid touching each other or having a deep conversation. She tries to touch Karin, who recoils at the gesture. Karin recalls an earlier occasion at the mansion, where, struggling with self-harm, she mutilated her genitals with a piece of broken glass to repel her husband Fredrik. Karin later dines with Maria, saying that Anna was devoted to Agnes and probably deserves a memento. She says she resents Anna's seeming familiarity with her and Maria, speaks of her own suicidal tendencies, and confesses her hatred of Maria and her flirtatiousness and shallow smiles. The sisters reconcile after the argument, touching each other.

In a dream sequence, Agnes briefly returns to life and asks Karin and then Maria to approach her. Karin, repelled by the invitation, says that she still has life and does not love Agnes enough to join her. Maria approaches the undead Agnes but flees in terror when she grabs her, saying that she cannot leave her husband and children. Anna re-enters the room and takes Agnes back to bed, where she cradles the dead Agnes in her arms.

The family decides to send Anna away at the end of the month, with Fredrik refusing to award her with any additional severance pay, and the maid rejects her promised memento. Maria returns to Joakim, and Karin cannot believe Maria's claim that she does not remember their touch. Anna finds Agnes' diary with an account of a visit with Maria, Karin and Anna, with a shared, nostalgic moment on a swing. Agnes wrote that "come what may, this is happiness."

ProductionEdit

DevelopmentEdit

File:Viskningar och rop klänning.jpg
Ingrid Thulin's dress as Karin. White dresses against a red background were a key colour motif in the film.

According to Bergman, he conceived the story during a lonely, unhappy time on Fårö when he wrote constantly.<ref name="Nyrerod">Template:Cite AV media</ref> He described a recurring dream of four women in white clothing in a red room, whispering to each other. He said that this symbolised his childhood view of the soul as a faceless person who was black on the outside, representing shame, and red on the inside.Template:Sfn The persistence of the vision indicated to Bergman that it could be a film, he said,<ref name="Nyrerod"/> and he planned a "portrait of my mother ... the great beloved of my childhood".Template:Sfn Karin has the same name as Bergman's mother,Template:Sfn but all four female protagonists are intended to represent aspects of her personality.Template:Sfn

A childhood memory of the Sophiahemmet mortuary also influenced the director:

<templatestyles src="Template:Blockquote/styles.css" />

Template:ErrorTemplate:Main other{{#if:|{{#if:|}}

}}

{{#invoke:Check for unknown parameters|check|unknown=Template:Main other|preview=Page using Template:Blockquote with unknown parameter "_VALUE_"|ignoreblank=y| 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | author | by | char | character | cite | class | content | multiline | personquoted | publication | quote | quotesource | quotetext | sign | source | style | text | title | ts }}

Since Bergman's films were difficult to market, foreign capital was unavailable to finance the film. He decided to shoot Cries and Whispers in Swedish rather than English (as his previous film, The Touch, had been) and finance it through his production company, Cinematograph. Although he used 750,000 SEK of his savings and borrowed 200,000 SEK, he also asked the Swedish Film Institute for help with the film's 1.5-million SEK budget. This attracted some criticism, since Bergman was not an up-and-coming director in the greatest need of subsidy.<ref name=criesandwhispersbergmanfoundation>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>Template:Sfn To save money, the main actresses and Nykvist returned their salaries as loans and were nominal co-producers.Template:Sfn

In his book, Images, Bergman wrote: "Today I feel that in Persona—and later in Cries and Whispers—I had gone as far as I could go. And that in these two instances when working in total freedom, I touched wordless secrets that only the cinema can discover".Template:Sfn In an essay included with the DVD, critic Peter Cowie quoted the director: "All of my films can be thought of in terms of black and white, except Cries and Whispers".<ref name="rogerebert.suntimes.com">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

CastingEdit

Cast list
Template:AnchorActorTemplate:Sfn Role
Template:Sortname Agnes
Template:Sortname Anna
Template:Sortname Karin
Template:Sortname Maria (and her mother)
Template:Sortname Isak, the priest
Template:Sortname Aunt Olga
Template:Sortname David
Template:Sortname Joakim
Template:Sortname Fredrik
Template:Sortname Maria's daughter
Template:Sortname young Maria

When Bergman wrote the screenplay, he intended from the start to cast Liv Ullmann and Ingrid Thulin. He explained his choice of Harriet Andersson for Agnes: "I would very much like to have Harriet, too, since she belongs to this breed of enigmatic women".<ref name=criesandwhispersbergmanfoundation/> Andersson had not worked with Bergman for years, and he sent her notes rather than a complete screenplay.<ref name="CowieAndersson">Template:Cite AV media</ref> Ullmann described receiving a 50-page "personal letter" from Bergman describing the story which began, "Dear Friends: We're now going to make a film together. It is a sort of a vision that I have and I will try to describe it".Template:SfnTemplate:Efn Andersson did not receive a backstory about Agnes; Agnes' sisters were married with children, but Andersson was uncertain whether Agnes had ever married or became ill at an early age and lived with her mother.<ref name="CowieAndersson"/>

Bergman and Ullmann had a previous romantic relationship, and their daughter Linn Ullmann appears as both Maria's daughter and Anna's daughter in the picture.Template:Sfnm Another of Bergman's daughters, Lena, also appears as young Maria.<ref name=criesandwhispersbergmanfoundation/>

The director initially said that he hoped Mia Farrow would be in the film: "Let's see if that works out. It probably will; why shouldn't it?" However, Farrow was never cast.<ref name=criesandwhispersbergmanfoundation/> Kari Sylwan, a novice in Bergman's films, had what would have been Farrow's role.<ref name="Cowie"/>

Pre-productionEdit

Few of Bergman's previous films were shot in colour. Red was particularly sensitive, and cinematographer Sven Nykvist made many photography tests to capture balanced combinations of reds, whites and skin colours.<ref name="Nyrerod"/> To the disappointment of Swedish Film Institute members, Bergman refused to shoot in their new, expensive studios and filmed on location at Taxinge-Näsby Castle.<ref name="Cowie"/><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Since the mansion's interior was dilapidated, the crew was free to paint and decorate as they saw fit.<ref name="Cowie"/>

FilmingEdit

File:Taxinge Näsby slottet 02.JPG
Cries and Whispers was filmed at Taxinge-Näsby Castle, outside Mariefred.

Principal photography took place from 9 September to 30 October 1971.<ref name="Cowie">Template:Cite AV media</ref> Nykvist used Eastmancolor film, which reduced graininess and would be the most sensitive to colours.Template:Sfn The final, outdoor swing scene was shot early in production so the filmmakers could have sunlight before the darker season set in.<ref name="Cowie"/> Ullmann said that every scene was shot in natural light, using large windows for indoor scenes.Template:Sfn

Andersson described the on-set mood as light, an antidote to the film's heavy subject matter. She said that although she usually read the screenplay and went to bed early during a production, the filmmakers kept her awake late to enhance her tired, ill appearance.<ref name="CowieAndersson"/> The actress modeled her death scene on the death of her father, and Bergman directed her deep, violent inhalations.<ref name="CowieAndersson"/>

Themes and interpretationsEdit

Previous Bergman films had focused on the apparent absence of God, but scholar Julian C. Rice quoted Bergman as saying that he had moved beyond that theme. Rice wrote that Cries and Whispers, following The Silence (1963) and Persona (1966), was based more on psychology and individuation.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> Academic Eva Rueschmann said that psychoanalysis was an obvious tool with which to study the film, given the subconscious links between its characters.Template:Sfn

Family and detachmentEdit

File:1903 Ludwig Richter.jpg
Illustration of "Hansel and Gretel" by Ludwig Richter; like Cries and Whispers, the fairy tale suggests familial abandonment.

Professor Egil Törnqvist examined the film's title. The young Maria whispers to her mother, and Karin and Maria whisper to each other as they bond. According to Törnqvist, "The cries relate to the opposite emotions: anguish, impotence, loneliness".Template:SfnTemplate:Efn Professor Emma Wilson described the family's predicament, with Karin feeling endangered by touch and Maria seeking an "erotic" touch. However, Maria is repelled by Agnes' decay and her dead body.Template:Sfn Rueschmann explained Karin's repulsion to touch as a result of her degree of isolation and restraint.Template:Sfn The scene where Anna cradles Agnes suggests that touch and sensation are soothing, despite the "opaque" question of their relationship, which may be comparable to sisterhood.Template:Sfn

The magic lantern show the sisters enjoy is "Hansel and Gretel", which reveals Agnes' feelings of abandonment and her mother's favouring of Maria; according to Rueschmann, the Brothers Grimm story of sibling unity contrasts the sisters' estrangement.Template:SfnTemplate:Efn Cinema historian P. Adams Sitney wrote that Hansel and Gretel's parents abandoned them in the forest (symbolism), and Agnes' cancer is the equivalent of the witch in the Brothers Grimm tale.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> Karin's cutting of her vulva means that her husband will not have sex with her, and the red wine symbolises blood from the womb. Törnqvist wrote that Karin's transfer of blood from her vulva to her mouth means that she will neither have sex nor speak, and preventing communication reinforces loneliness.Template:Sfn Sitney wrote that the family is most united when reading Charles Dickens' The Pickwick Papers, which describes "male solidarity and chicanery, threatened by female plots for marriage".Template:Sfn According to Frank Gado, detachment returns after Agnes' funeral. Anna is dismissed without warmth or sympathy, and the men deny her monetary rewards despite years of service. Maria also rejects "sentimental appeals" from Karin.Template:Sfn

Film scholar Marc Gervais wrote that Cries and Whispers has no definitive solution of whether suffering and death have any meaning, citing the pastor who expresses his own doubts and fears when he eulogises Agnes. Gervais likened this to the protagonist of Bergman's earlier Winter Light, Bergman's own conflicted feelings and his relationship to his father, Erik, a minister of the Church of Sweden.Template:SfnTemplate:Efn According to Gervais, the ending presents Bergman's solution: a touch, on certain occasions, can make life worthwhile.Template:Sfn Törnqvist compared the ending to that of Bergman's 1957 Wild Strawberries; it "points to the past, to a paradisaic existence in this life, to the communion inherent in childhood that has later been lost".Template:Sfn

Sex and gender rolesEdit

Critic Marco Lanzagorta wrote, "Undeniably, Cries and Whispers is a film about the world of women, and is very open in terms of the gender and sexual politics that it portrays".<ref name="Lanzagorta"/> The story fits Bergman's motif of "warring women", seen earlier in The Silence and Persona and later in Autumn Sonata (1978).Template:Sfn The film inspired essays about Bergman's view of women.Template:Sfn Patricia Erens wrote, "Bergman's women in such films as Persona and Cries and Whispers are not simply objects of abuse, but creatures through whom Bergman can express his own subjective fears, his many frustrations and failures at preserving autonomy of self and control of reality".Template:Sfn

Feminists critiqued the film.Template:Sfn In Film Quarterly, Joan Mellen acknowledged that Bergman used his female characters as mouthpieces and his women signify "the dilemma of alienated, suffering human beings".<ref name="Mellen">Template:Cite journal</ref> In Bergman's films, women and men fail to find answers to their dilemmas; according to Mellen, the men are unanswered or cannot care for anyone but themselves. However, she wrote that Bergman's women fail because of their biology and an inability to move past their sexuality: "Bergman insists that because of their physiology, women are trapped in dry and empty lives within which they wither as the lines begin to appear on their faces".<ref name="Mellen"/> Critic Molly Haskell assigned Cries and Whispers to Bergman's later filmography, which differed from his earlier works in their view of women. Women in his early films lived in harmony with each other and had more-complete lives; Bergman used the women in Cries and Whispers and his later films as "projections of his soul", revealing his "sexual vanity".Template:Sfn According to Haskell, Bergman attacked his female characters for the attributes he gave them: Karin's repression and Maria's sexuality.Template:Sfn

Academic Laura Hubner agreed with CineAction essayist Varda Burstyn's view that Cries and Whispers depicts the suppression of women, but it does not endorse the suppression and the film opposes patriarchy.Template:Sfn<ref>Template:Cite magazine</ref> Rueschmann traced the emotional estrangement to the women's mother, who reacts to the era's gender roles with "boredom, anger and frustration". According to Rueschmann, her daughters assume (or reject) her position and harm themselves in the process.Template:Sfn Agnes' confinement to bed may reflect gender roles and expectations for women about sex, childbirth and death.Template:Sfn Author Birgitta Steene disputed what she called Mellen's Marxist feminist analysis, cross-referencing Bergman's realistic and metaphorical films to say that they are not the product of a sexist outlook.Template:Sfn

Rueschmann quoted Bergman as saying his "ceaseless fascination with the whole race of women is one of [his] mainsprings. Obviously such an obsession implies ambivalence; it has something compulsive about it".Template:Sfn However, he doubted that there was much difference between men and women: "I think that if I had made Cries and Whispers with four men in the leading roles, the story would have been largely the same".Template:Sfn

Template:AnchorMythical and biblical allusionsEdit

File:LaPieta-MichelAnge detalle.jpg
Michelangelo's Pietà; Agnes' death is reminiscent of Jesus' Passion.

Although Agnes' apparent resurrection may reflect Anna's fear (or desire), Emma Wilson wrote that it blurred the line between life and dream and might involve supernatural activity.Template:Sfn Bergman explained the scene:

<templatestyles src="Template:Blockquote/styles.css" />

Death is the ultimate loneliness; that is what is so important. Agnes's death has been caught up halfway out into the void. I can't see that there's anything odd about that. Yes, by Christ there is! This situation has never been known, either in reality or at the movies.Template:Sfn{{#if:|{{#if:|}}

}}

{{#invoke:Check for unknown parameters|check|unknown=Template:Main other|preview=Page using Template:Blockquote with unknown parameter "_VALUE_"|ignoreblank=y| 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | author | by | char | character | cite | class | content | multiline | personquoted | publication | quote | quotesource | quotetext | sign | source | style | text | title | ts }}

Törnqvist advised against a literal reading of Agnes rising from the dead, relating it to the sisters' guilt.Template:Sfn

According to Sitney, the statue in the prologue may be Apollo or Orpheus. If the artistic, doomed Agnes matches Orpheus as well as Bergman, Agnes' mother may correspond to Eurydice (representing "the green world").Template:Sfn P. Adams Sitney concluded that Cries and Whispers tells of an "Orphic transformation of terror into art, of the loss of the mother into the musical richness of autumnal color".Template:Sfn

The sisters' Aunt Olga uses the magic lantern to narrate "Hansel and Gretel", and Sitney connected this with "the gift of fairy tales—and thereby the psychic-defense machinery for exteriorising infantile and Oedipal terrors".Template:Sfn In the folk tale "Cinderella", the wicked stepsisters' bleeding feet as a metaphor for menstruation is magnified by Karin's cutting of her vulva.Template:Sfn Her laugh is reminiscent of the wicked witch in "Hansel and Gretel", as she reacts to the damage her sexuality has done.Template:Sfn

Törnqvist, seeing that Anna prays for her dead daughter while eating an apple, wrote: "The eating of the apple links Anna, whose dead daughter was undoubtedly an illegitimate child, with the Eve of the Fall, with Original Sin".Template:Sfn According to editor Raphael Shargel, Anna seems oblivious to the sacrilege of snacking immediately after worship and that her choice of food is the forbidden fruit.Template:Sfn

Törnqvist wrote that Agnes' prolonged pain and death resemble the Passion of Jesus,Template:Sfn and Wilson compared the position of Agnes' arms and legs to Jesus' body after his Passion.Template:Sfn Gado also saw parallels to the crucifixion of Jesus and flashbacks to Good Friday and a mention of Twelfth Night at the end of the film (which he considered ironic, since Twelfth Night is associated with revelation).Template:Sfn The magic-lantern show takes place on Twelfth Night.Template:Sfn Sitney, Rueschmann, and Irving Singer described the scene where Anna cradles Agnes as reminiscent of Pietà,Template:Sfnm with Lanzagorta specifying Michelangelo's Pietà.<ref name="Lanzagorta">Template:Cite magazine</ref> According to academic Arthur Gibson, the Pietà rite becomes redemption: "Anna is holding in her arms the pain and loneliness and sin of the world caught up in the innocent Divine Sufferer".Template:Sfn

StyleEdit

File:Red (34286724965).jpg
Crimson features extensively in the film's colour scheme.

In 1972, VarietyTemplate:'s staff defined "Bergman's lean style" as including a "use of lingering close-ups, fades to red and a soundtrack echoing with the ticking of clocks, the rustle of dresses and the hushed cries of the lost".<ref name="Variety"/> Critic Richard Brody called Cries and Whispers a period piece in which costumes are prominent.<ref name="Brody"/> According to Gervais, Bergman had shed his previous austerity in favour of greater aesthetics.Template:Sfn

Wilson noted the film's red rooms occupied by women in white, and the "azure, Edenic images of the start are gradually engulfed in crimson".<ref name="Wilson"/> Producer Bruce A. Block described its colour variety as minimal, with an emphasis on "extremely saturated red".Template:Sfn According to Richard Armstrong, the Eastmancolor film added "a livid, slightly oneiric quality".Template:Sfn Two rooms in the first scene (one where Maria is sleeping and the other being Agnes' room) are joined by the same colours, including "blood red" carpets and drapes and white pillows and nightdresses.Template:Sfn Wilson observed that the film has fade-ins and fade-outs in saturated reds.<ref name="Wilson"/> Sitney analysed Cries and WhispersTemplate:' colour scheme, writing that there are moves from red with white to red with black to orange and ochre (in the final, autumnal outdoor scene).<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> Blood, seen when Maria's husband injures himself and Karin cuts her vulva, echoes an earlier view of the mother character holding a red book against her dress. Sitney associates this with menstruation and castration.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>

Wilson described other uses of imagery: statues filling a garden, decorations, sunlight on a clock and a view of Maria revealing the "texture" of her hair.Template:Sfn Images follow one another in the five-minute prologue with no spoken words.Template:Sfn The close-ups of Maria in the initial scene are childlike.Template:Sfn Agnes is seen with an open mouth and moist eyes, depicting her pain.Template:Sfn Her memories of her mother are idealised, with the "flourishing greenery of the Edenic garden".Template:Sfn Surveying the visuals and Bergman's depiction of social isolation and mourning, critics Christopher Heathcote and Jai Marshall found parallels in the paintings of Edvard Munch.<ref>Template:Cite magazine</ref>

{{#invoke:Listen|main}} Johann Sebastian Bach's sarabande from Cello Suite No. 5 in C minor, performed by Pierre Fournier, is used in the film.Template:Sfn Noting its use when the two sisters touch affectionately, critic Robin Wood wrote that it fit Bergman's use of Bach to signify "a possible transcendent wholeness".Template:SfnTemplate:Efn The score also contains Frédéric Chopin's Mazurka in A minor, Op.17/4, performed by Käbi Laretei.Template:Sfn According to musicologist Alexis Luko, Bergman's use of the mazurka when Anna recalls her deceased daughter communicates "a sensory moment of reminiscence".Template:Sfn

Sounds are used in other ways, with Anna's dead daughter apparently audible when Anna is near the cradle following Agnes' death.Template:Sfn The prologue's bells and clocks are more audible than the natural sounds preceding them; Agnes' struggle to breathe soon joins the clocks' ticking, with editor Ken Dancyger finding "the continuity of time and life".Template:Sfn

ReleaseEdit

Every major film-distribution company rejected Cries and Whispers, even when Bergman asked for an advance of only $75,000.Template:Sfn Its U.S. rights were bought by Roger Corman of New World Pictures (who favored having the studio branch out into arthouse distribution such as with Amarcord) for $150,000. Corman spent an additional $80,000 on marketing to go with booking the film on the drive-in circuit.Template:Sfn<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> According to the producer, the film made a profit of $1 million and was Bergman's biggest success in the U.S.Template:Sfn Author Tino Balio reported a U.S. gross of $1.2 million from 803 theatres, and called it Bergman's best-performing film since The Silence.Template:Sfn To qualify for the 46th Academy Awards, distributors hurried to premiere Cries and Whispers in Los Angeles County (several months before its Swedish release).Template:Sfn It premiered in New York City on 21 December 1972.Template:Sfn

The film premiered at the Spegeln theatre in Stockholm on 5 March 1973.Template:Sfn Cries and Whispers was later shown out of competition at the 1973 Cannes Film Festival, where Bergman received a strong positive reaction from the audience.Template:Sfn

At the 61st Berlin International Film Festival in February 2011 (with Andersson in attendance), Cries and Whispers was screened in the Retrospective section.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> In 2015, The Criterion Collection released a 2K restoration on Blu-ray in Region A.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

ReceptionEdit

Critical receptionEdit

Before the film's release, estimations of Bergman were lowered by The Rite (1969) and The Touch (1971).<ref name="Parkinson"/> In Sweden, Svenska Dagbladet critic Åke Janzon and Dagens Nyheter critic Hanserik Hjerten assessed Cries and Whispers as a poetically-rendered psychological study.Template:Sfn Critic O. Foss wrote a less-positive review in Fant, calling it "a rhapsody of petrified Bergman themes".Template:Sfn The Swedish cultural magazine Ord och Bild considered the film as Bergman’s personal view on women and argued that the film was both static and ahistorical.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>

The film was generally praised in the United States.Template:Sfn In The New York Times, Vincent Canby called it a "magnificent, moving, and very mysterious new film".<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> He included the film in his list of the 10 Best Films of 1972.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Roger Ebert gave Cries and Whispers four stars (out of four) in his initial review: "We slip lower in our seats, feeling claustrophobia and sexual disquiet, realizing that we have been surrounded by the vision of a film maker who has absolute mastery of his art".<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> and named it "the best film of 1973".<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> Variety staff praised the direction for "a hypnotic impact".<ref name="Variety">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> In New York, Judith Crist called it "a work of genius— certainly the most complex, the most perceptive and the most humane of Bergman's works to date".<ref>Template:Cite magazine</ref> François Truffaut made a theatrical comparison, saying that the film "begins like Chekhov's Three Sisters and ends like The Cherry Orchard and in between it's more like Strindberg".Template:Sfn

Empire critic David Parkinson gave Cries and Whispers five stars in 2000, writing that the film fit a subset of "character study" at which Bergman was adept.<ref name="Parkinson">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Reviewing the DVD in The New Yorker, Richard Brody said that despite its period setting, the emotional drama resonated with modern audiences.<ref name="Brody">Template:Cite magazine</ref> Ebert added it to his "Great Movies" list in 2002, writing that to watch the film "is to touch the extremes of human feeling. It is so personal, so penetrating of privacy, we almost want to look away".<ref name="rogerebert.suntimes.com"/> That year, James Berardinelli praised Andersson's performance as "so powerful that we feel like intruders watching it. She screams, whimpers, begs, and cries. She craves death and fears it". Berardinelli considered Bergman's use of crimson effective in creating mood; the "natural associations one makes with this color, especially in a story like this, are of sin and blood".<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Zendry Svärdkrona's 2003 Aftonbladet review called it a masterpiece with wonderful aesthetics but unpleasant subject matter, citing Nykvist and Andersson.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Emanuel Levy praised the film's cinematography and the performances of the female leads, calling the result a masterpiece in 2008.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Cries and Whispers ranked 154th in the British Film Institute's 2012 Sight & Sound critics' poll of the greatest films ever made.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Leonard Maltin gave the film three stars in his 2014 Movie Guide, praising its visuals but cautioning viewers about the large amount of dialogue.Template:Sfn Reviewing the Blu-ray in 2015, SF Gate critic Mick LaSalle called Cries and Whispers a "masterpiece" in which the colour red had an important effect.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Los Angeles Times critic Andy Klein placed the film "solidly in the existential/emotional angst mode of [Bergman's] best work", called it a triumphant comeback from The Touch, and joked about the resurrection scene: "Yes, technically this is a zombie film".<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Peter Bradshaw of The Guardian gave the film five stars out of five writing "This film burns, like ice held to the skin."<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

Don Druker wrote a negative review in the Chicago Reader, criticising a lack of substance,<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> and Time OutTemplate:'s review called the film a "red herring" compared to Bergman's purer psychological dramas.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

On the review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, Cries and Whispers has an approval rating of 91% based on 34 reviews, with an average score of 8.50/10. The site's critical consensus reads: "Visually stunning and achingly performed, Ingmar Bergman's chamber piece is a visceral rumination on death and sisterhood."<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

The February 2020 issue of New York Magazine lists Cries and Whispers as among "The Best Movies That Lost Best Picture at the Oscars."<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>

AccoladesEdit

Cries and Whispers won three categories at the 9th Guldbagge Awards in Sweden, including Best Film.<ref name="9thGuldbagge">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> At Cannes, it won the Technical Grand Prize.<ref name="Cannes">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> It was the fourth foreign-language film ever nominated for the Academy Award for Best Picture,Template:Efn in addition to four other nominations at the 46th Academy Awards; Sven Nykvist won for Best Cinematography.<ref name="Oscar">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

The film was nominated for, and won, several other awards from critics' associations and festivals. At the 27th British Academy Film Awards, Sven Nykvist was nominated for Best Cinematography and Ingrid Thulin for Best Supporting Actress;<ref name="BAFTAAward"/> at the 30th Golden Globe Awards, it was nominated for Best Foreign Language Film.<ref name="GoldenGlobe"/>

Award Date of ceremony Category Recipient(s) Result Template:Abbr
Academy Awards 2 April 1974 Best Picture Ingmar Bergman Template:Nom <ref name="Oscar"/>
Best Director Template:Nom
Best Original Screenplay Template:Nom
Best Cinematography Sven Nykvist Template:Won
Best Costume Design Marik Vos Template:Nom
Bodil Awards 1974 Best European Film Ingmar Bergman Template:Won <ref name="9thGuldbagge"/>
BAFTA Awards 1974 Best Cinematography Sven Nykvist Template:Nom <ref name="BAFTAAward">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation CitationClass=web

}}</ref>

Best Supporting Actress Ingrid Thulin Template:Nom
Cannes Film Festival 10–25 May 1973 Vulcan Technical Grand Prize Ingmar Bergman Template:Won <ref name="Cannes"/>
David di Donatello 1973 Best Foreign Director Template:Won <ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation CitationClass=web

}}</ref>

Special David Harriet Andersson Template:Won Template:Sfn
Ingrid Thulin Template:Won
Liv Ullmann Template:Won
Kari Sylwan Template:Won
Golden Globes 28 January 1973 Best Foreign Language Film Ingmar Bergman Template:Nom <ref name="GoldenGlobe">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation CitationClass=web

}}</ref>

Guldbagge Awards 29 October 1973 Best Film Template:Won <ref name="9thGuldbagge"/>
Best Actress Harriet Andersson Template:Won
Special Achievemnent Sven Nykvist Template:Won
Jussi Awards 1975 Best Foreign Director Ingmar Bergman Template:Won <ref name="9thGuldbagge"/>
Nastro d'Argento 1974 Best Foreign Film Template:Won <ref name="9thGuldbagge"/>
National Board of Review 24 December 1973 Best Director Template:Won <ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation CitationClass=web

}}</ref>

Best Foreign Language Film Template:Won
Top Foreign Films Template:Won
National Society of Film Critics 29 December 1972 Best Screenplay Template:Won <ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation CitationClass=web

}}</ref>

Best Cinematography Sven Nykvist Template:Won
New York Film Critics Circle 3 January 1973 Best Film Ingmar Bergman Template:Won <ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation CitationClass=web

}}</ref>

Best Director Template:Won
Best Screenplay Template:Won
Best Actress Liv Ullmann Template:Won

LegacyEdit

In 1981, PostNord Sverige issued a postage stamp of the scene where Anna holds Agnes as part of a series commemorating the history of Swedish cinema.Template:Sfn Woody Allen's later films, including 1978's Interiors and 1986's Hannah and Her Sisters, were influenced by Cries and Whispers,Template:Efn as was Margarethe von Trotta's 1979—1988 trilogy: Sisters, or the Balance of Happiness, Marianne and Juliane and Love and Fear.Template:Sfn In 2017, Hallwyl Museum exhibited costumes from Cries and Whispers and other Bergman films.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Robert Eggers cited it as an influence on his version of Nosferatu.

It has been adapted for the stage. Andrei Șerban directed Cries and Whispers in 2010 for the Hungarian Theatre of Cluj, dramatising Bergman's story and the film's production.Template:Sfn Ivo van Hove directed a 2009 adaptation at the Bergman Festival in Sweden's Royal Dramatic Theatre,<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> and in 2011 at the Brooklyn Academy of Music with Chris Nietvelt as Agnes, moving the story to a contemporary setting, reducing the use of red and replacing the film's classical music with modern songs, including Janis Joplin's "Cry Baby".<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

NotesEdit

Template:Noteslist

ReferencesEdit

Template:Reflist

BibliographyEdit

Template:Refbegin

Template:Refend

External linksEdit

 | title/{{#if: {{#invoke:ustring|match|1=0069467|2=^tt}}
   | Template:Trim/
   | tt0069467/
   }}
 | {{#if: {{#property:P345|from=}}
   | title/Template:First word/
   | find?q=%5B%5B%3ATemplate%3APAGENAMEBASE%5D%5D&s=tt
   }}
 }}{{#ifeq: {{#invoke:If any equal|main|Q618779|Q67325957|Q33999|value=Template:Wikidata}} | yes 
     | {{#switch: Template:Wikidata 
       | Q618779 
       | Q67325957  = awards Awards for
       | Q33999  = fullcredits Full cast and crew of
       }}
   | {{#if: Template:Wikidata 
     | {{#switch: Template:Wikidata
       | Q63032896 
       | Q66763446  = fullcredits Full cast and crew of
       | Q107974527 
       | Q482994  = soundtrack Soundtrack of
       }}
     }}
   }} Template:Trim] at {{#if: | IMDb | IMDb }}Template:EditAtWikidata{{#invoke:Check for unknown parameters|check|unknown=Template:Main other|preview=Page using Template:IMDb title with unknown parameter "_VALUE_"|showblankpositional=1| 1 | 2 | 3 | description | id | link_hide | qid | quotes | title }}{{#switch: {{#invoke:String2|matchAny|^tt.........|^tt.......|tt|.........|source=0069467|plain=false}}| 1 | 3 = Template:Main otherTemplate:Preview warning| 4 = Template:Main otherTemplate:Preview warning}}{{#if: 0069467 {{#property:P345}} || Template:Preview warningTemplate:Main other }}{{#switch: Template:Wikidata 

| Q21191270 | Q21664088 | Q50062923 | Q50914552 | Q99079902 | Q123186929 | Q55422400 | Q61220733 =Template:Preview warning | Q3464665 =Template:Preview warning }}{{#ifeq: Template:Wikidata | Q21191270 |Template:Preview warning }}{{#if: 0069467 | Template:WikidataCheck }}

Template:Ingmar Bergman Template:Navboxes

Template:Authority control