Ingmar Bergman 3,433 ratings
277 reviews
âWhen a film is not a document, it is a dream. . . . At the editing table, when I run the strip of film through, frame by frame, I still feel that dizzy sense of magic of my childhood.â Bergman, who has conveyed this heady sense of wonder and vision to moviegoers for decades, traces his lifelong love affair with film in his breathtakingly visual autobiography, The Magic Lantern.More grand mosaic than linear account, Bergmanâs vignettes trace his life from a rural Swedish childhood through his work in theater to Hollywoodâs golden age, and a tumultuous romantic history that includes five wives and more than a few mistresses. Throughout, Bergman recounts his life in a series of deeply personal flashbacks that document some of the most important moments in twentieth-century filmmaking as well as the private obsessions of the man behind them. Ambitious in scope yet sensitively wrought, The Magic Lantern is a window to the mind of one of our eraâs great geniuses. â[Bergman] has found a way to show the soulâs landscape . . . . Many gripping revelations.ââNew York Times Book Review âJoan Tateâs translation of this book has delicacy and true pitch . . . The Magic Lantern is as personal and penetrating as a Bergman film, wry, shadowy, austere.ââNew Republic â[Bergman] keeps returning to his past, reassessing it, distilling its meaning, offering it to his audiences in dazzling new shapes.ââNew York Times âWhat Bergman does relate, particularly his tangled relationships with his parents, is not only illuminating but quite moving. No âtell-allâ book this one, but revealing in ways that much longer and allegedly âfrankerâ books are not.ââLibrary Journal
Genres:
FilmBiographyNonfictionMemoirAutobiographyArtMedia Tie InSwedish LiteratureBiography MemoirSweden
254 Pages