His best film?

His best film?

I don't know if its his best but I think my favourite of his would be Autumn Sonata

patrician answer:
anything post-persona

pleb answer:
seventh seal / wild strawberries / summer with monika

contrarian answer:
all these women

one of my favs too, ullman''s expressions are painting-like
>anything post-persona
have you watched Virgin Spring or Through A Glass Darkly?

i'd have to say his best film is Shame, Through a Glass Darkly or Hour Of The Wolf
tho the dialogues for In The Presence Of A Clown, Autumn Sonata and Cries and Whispers
are incredibly written

Hour of the Wolf

Are you saying the seventh seal is bad or just that his other films are even better?

I've only seen persona and the seventh seal and I thought both were amazing, couldn't say which I liked more

Boardwalk Empire season 3

hour of the wolf

I like him in Meet The Parents.

The Virgin Spring

Winter Light came out before Persona and it's his best, you know nothing

Persona is my true answer, but that's because of the enormous impact it had on me. I still think it's one of the greatest films ever.
Fanny and Alexander is the one I recommend to everyone, because it's literally impossible to hate.
Scenes from a Marriage is what I say is his most straightforward story: symbolism is kept at a minimum, focus kept on acting.

I could pare it down to Persona, but lots of people would throw up their hands at it in the first few minutes and turn it off, so it makes sense to include answers that satisfy not just myself.

Cries and Whispers is a personal favorite. The colors and cinematography are so intense, it's a really unique film for one of his later ones. Plus it has all 3 of the best Bergman women in one.

The Silence cuz bewbz

it's a visceral experience for sure - one I really had the impression of not wanting to see again anytime soon, but powerful definitely.
that's one of the "great director uses colour for the first time, so he really worked at thinking about how he'd use it" films. Ozu's "Floating Weeds," or Kurosawa's "Dodes'ka-den."
but what it reminds me of more than anything is Buñuel's "Belle de jour" in the way it tries to use colour to make us feel even more uncomfortable and alienated by the situations we're seeing than they otherwise would have been had the film been in black and white.

Pretty accurate review. It doesn't have quit the depth as his earlier ones but I love the way he uses color to portray the message.

The Faith Trilogy was probably his peak.

hour of the wolf is shit

...

I've had a copy if The Seventh Seal for a long time now but never seen it. I've actually never seen a Bergman. He's one if the few big name directors I've missed out on.

Without spoiling the storyline, what kind of film do I have to be in the mood for to enjoy it?

I have various classics films just waiting, and have no idea when to watch them. Le Amiche, Night of the Hunter, Seven Samurai, Les Diaboliques, City Girl, Onibaba, Sunset Boulevard and probably a dozen more.

>what kind of film do I have to be in the mood for to enjoy it?
approach it like a tarkovsky

seventh seal is his worst, skip it

Wild Strawberries by a mile.

Night of the Hunter is so underrated

Also I think all the movies you listed are better than Seventh Seal.

Fanny och Alexander

Equinox Flower is actually Ozu's first color film, it's also better than Floating Weeds imo. How does Dodes'ka-den measure up to the rest of Kurosawa's filmography? The latest film of his I've seen is Red Beard

>och
being this pretentious

>changing "and" to "och" is pretentious

hmmm

I like wild strawberries and autumn sonata. Is fanny and alexander any good? I haven't seen it yet.