such honesty..so raw..and yet so close and warm... Love u so much Ingmar, a life full of memories i have had partially thanks to you.. Have a wonderful -hereafter- with Ingrid...
PART 2 - The images and forms that he has created, and which derive from this pathological condition, are thus, at base, not very profound and project, merely, as highly stylized parodies or embodiments of philosophical ideas. This is what I have always felt upon seeing his films - and this view has been confirmed as I watch this "interview".
PART ! - Bergman strikes me as a child who has had a seriously stunted development and has not managed to achieve emotional maturity. It is this, coupled with his extreme narcissism that is what creates the appearance of artistic or philosophical depth.
@lourak Who are you to judge who is emotionally mature and who is not. I think he seems to be very mature, more mature than most adults. He also seems to be a very honest person something few people are. Judge yourself not others arrogant fool.
To the negative people here: We all have problems. He is late in life here, opening up regarding things we keep to ourselves. His honesty with himself is what guided his unmatched perspective on human relations, actions and mental/emotional condition. His superior understanding of self, and others. His superior intelligence is on display here. The man is a genius, in his own class. Kurasawa is close, but Ingmar Bergman is the greatest of all time. We are lucky he is shared his knowledge.
I don`t think that Bergmann enjoys his misery, I think he knew, very clear, his demons, as a creator and a great artist he had a complete notion of himself. I think that this is a key for understand his great work.
Two things made him sink a little in my opinion. First, his delusions about death. Second, the way he fetishises his suffering, i.e. his obsession with his "inner demons".
This man enjoys his misery. Apart from that, terrific interview with a terrific person
After watching this, I didn't want to watch other interviews of him lest not to loose the sensations emerged from. It was like one of his films, so provocative and real that one starts to get involved with oneself simultaneously..
Wonderful interview/documentary. It's amazing how he sounds so different in his answers then, in his later life, than when he was a younger 40-something director. Yet, he's still somehow the same.
I'm a wanna be filmmaker, and watching this reminded me that trying to please an audiance with your film is secondary to spewing out your real emotions and getting to the core of who we are onto the screen. Because then surely this is the biggest audiance pay off of all...reality.
Fascinating and very inspirational documentary...Great man! Great director!
emiliankasemi 2 months ago
Thanks for posting. One of my favourite artists.
HankJennings 4 months ago
such honesty..so raw..and yet so close and warm... Love u so much Ingmar, a life full of memories i have had partially thanks to you.. Have a wonderful -hereafter- with Ingrid...
reallyfullofmyself 10 months ago 2
To bad part 6 is way out of sync, but overall a very good interview. Thanks for uploading this for the people =)
soundzor 10 months ago
We have witnessed a six-part interview of a master, a pure genius.
mannerofman 10 months ago
the actor in the beginning, is it the one who played karlchen in "fanny and alexander"?
MoveOverCasanova 1 year ago
It's incredible how he could talk about himself whithout falsehood , I'm wandering if I ever will be so mature , so wise man .
Sebakg 1 year ago
this is what we call real talk. seems to be a rare thing these days
paintedturtle 1 year ago 2
Beautiful interview
TenderHistoryInRust 1 year ago
PART 2 - The images and forms that he has created, and which derive from this pathological condition, are thus, at base, not very profound and project, merely, as highly stylized parodies or embodiments of philosophical ideas. This is what I have always felt upon seeing his films - and this view has been confirmed as I watch this "interview".
lourak 1 year ago
PART ! - Bergman strikes me as a child who has had a seriously stunted development and has not managed to achieve emotional maturity. It is this, coupled with his extreme narcissism that is what creates the appearance of artistic or philosophical depth.
lourak 1 year ago
@lourak Who are you to judge who is emotionally mature and who is not. I think he seems to be very mature, more mature than most adults. He also seems to be a very honest person something few people are. Judge yourself not others arrogant fool.
Hermoor 4 months ago
Thank you very much for posting this interview. I'll keep Bergman's voice, his words and his silence.
Ernst
propseven 1 year ago
hehe that pretty much sum up my demons as well =D
djcalvados 1 year ago
Fascinating.
Jitpring 2 years ago
The best director ever.
juancm42 2 years ago 5
To the negative people here: We all have problems. He is late in life here, opening up regarding things we keep to ourselves. His honesty with himself is what guided his unmatched perspective on human relations, actions and mental/emotional condition. His superior understanding of self, and others. His superior intelligence is on display here. The man is a genius, in his own class. Kurasawa is close, but Ingmar Bergman is the greatest of all time. We are lucky he is shared his knowledge.
MSQ4LIFE 2 years ago 2
Thank you for posting.
I don`t think that Bergmann enjoys his misery, I think he knew, very clear, his demons, as a creator and a great artist he had a complete notion of himself. I think that this is a key for understand his great work.
Eudora74 2 years ago
Two things made him sink a little in my opinion. First, his delusions about death. Second, the way he fetishises his suffering, i.e. his obsession with his "inner demons".
This man enjoys his misery. Apart from that, terrific interview with a terrific person
GreggaryPeccary 2 years ago
Wow, Bergman had all of my inner demons it seems. Maybe that is why I can relate to all of his movies and find comfort in them!
snipermonkey86 2 years ago
I feel my own pains, not that many but thats what I feel:)
paracel72 2 years ago
Ingmar Bergman can reach your heart so effortlessly.... as an artist and as a human being. He is an inspirational miracle... How does he do it?
ClausCST 2 years ago
Thank you very much for hosting this. Its my second time watching the thing from beginning to end. His films inspire me.
atviking 2 years ago 2
thank you thank you!! i loved watching this.
PaulDribbins 2 years ago
Inspirational! I Love this documentary!
MattieCooper 2 years ago
Thank you very much for this gem..
sofiachan1 2 years ago
Thank you for posting this wonderful program with Bergmann!!
bellamondo 2 years ago
After watching this, I didn't want to watch other interviews of him lest not to loose the sensations emerged from. It was like one of his films, so provocative and real that one starts to get involved with oneself simultaneously..
s6tone 2 years ago 29
That's exactly how I felt. It was like one of his films, as if Bergman himself read from a script.
ldl21 2 years ago
This was a wonderful documentary. I enjoyed every minute of it.
slide1967 3 years ago 6
Wonderful interview/documentary. It's amazing how he sounds so different in his answers then, in his later life, than when he was a younger 40-something director. Yet, he's still somehow the same.
NGS712 3 years ago 4
thank you so much
maurgenville22 3 years ago 7
Excellent documentary. I'm very grateful for it.
clarel1970 3 years ago 8
perfect
aronaguiar 3 years ago 17
brilliant documentary,
I'm a wanna be filmmaker, and watching this reminded me that trying to please an audiance with your film is secondary to spewing out your real emotions and getting to the core of who we are onto the screen. Because then surely this is the biggest audiance pay off of all...reality.
R.I.P....Ingmar B. x
doowopfozz 3 years ago 7
Simply Amasing.
Is it possible to find this video on the internet and download it?
anetteno1 3 years ago 8