Podcast: Download (Duration: 1:01:51 — 84.9MB)
This time on the podcast, Scott Nye, David Blakeslee, Trevor Berrett, and Arik Devens discuss Ingmar Bergman’s Through a Glass Darkly.
While vacationing on a remote island retreat, a family’s fragile ties are tested when daughter Karin (an astonishing Harriet Andersson) discovers her father (Gunnar Björnstrand) has been using her schizophrenia for his own literary ends. As she drifts in and out of lucidity, Karin’s father, her husband (Max von Sydow), and her younger brother (Lars Passgård) are unable to prevent her descent into the abyss of mental illness. Winner of the Academy Award for best foreign-language film, Through a Glass Darkly, the first work in Ingmar Bergman’s trilogy on faith and its loss (to be followed by Winter Light and The Silence), presents an unflinching vision of a family’s near disintegration and a tortured psyche further taunted by the intangibility of God’s presence.
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Episode Links
- Through a Glass Darkly – The Criterion Collection
- Through a Glass Darkly (1961) – IMDb
- Through a Glass Darkly (film) – Wikipedia
- Through a Glass Darkly (1961) – #209 | Criterion Reflections
- Ingmar Bergman: Through a Glass Darkly – The Mookse and the Gripes
- Through a Glass Darkly – Ingmar Bergman Online Resource
- Through a Glass Darkly: The Beginnings of Bergman’s Chamber Drama | Cinematheque
Episode Credits
- Scott Nye (Twitter / Battleship Pretension)
- David Blakeslee (Twitter / Criterion Reflections)
- Trevor Berrett (Twitter / The Mookse and the Gripes)
- Arik Devens (Twitter)