Posted AT 3:55 AM EDT on 31/07/07
A director's director
LIAM LACEY
From Tuesday's Globe and Mail
From the mid-1950s to the early 1980s, through such masterpieces as The Seventh Seal, Wild Strawberries, Winter Light, Through A Glass Darkly, Persona, Cries and Whispers, Scenes from a Marriage and Fanny and Alexander, Ingmar Bergman's films were synonymous with art-house complexity and profundity. The Shakespeare of cinema even inspired an adjective, Bergmanesque, which meant bleak, suffocating, symbol-laden and bordering on hysteria.
The full text of this article has 1225 words.
To continue reading this article, you will need to purchase this article.
Already have a member account? Login now
Television
- Worth watching
- The Globe's picks for the best in weekend viewing options
50 Greatest Books

- Tale of a whale is a whale of a tale
- A ripping good yarn, with acts of heroism, humour and daring that still thrill after more than 150 years
2
-
Submit your thoughts:
The 50 greatest books
-
Earlier discussion:
Martin Levin on the Globe series
Web Seven

- Ivor Tossell Re: acting
- Why the narcissistic reaction video is here to stay
1
Gamer
- Scott Colbourne ‘E3 '08 = epic fail'
- Look for music titles, but not for originality coming out of annual games show
3
Ingram 2.0

- Does Kanye West use a "ghost blogger?"
- Other bloggers say the hip-hop artist couldn't possibly be the only one posting things to his blog, but Kanye says it is all him
Commentary
- Russell Smith To all of those artists I shamefacedly adore
Essential tracks

- Young & Sexy
- Along with clips from other artists, including Chad Van Gaalen

- Orchestra mambo
- Short clips from selected artists including Ghostkeeper and Tagaq
Society

- Dora! Dora! Dora!

- Pre-awards gathering in Toronto

- In the pink

- Dance aficionados converged en masse for the second annual Mad Hot fundraiser at the Four Seasons Centre








