Autumn Sonata | |
Director: | Ingmar Bergman |
Music: | Frédéric Chopin |
Cinematography: | Sven Nykvist |
Editing: | Sylvia Ingmarsdotter |
Studio: | ITC Entertainment |
Distributor: | Constantin Film |
Runtime: | 99 minutes |
Country: | West Germany |
Gross: | $2 million[1] |
Language: | Swedish |
Autumn Sonata (Swedish: Höstsonaten|link=no) is a 1978 drama film written and directed by Ingmar Bergman, and starring Ingrid Bergman (in her final film role), Liv Ullmann and Lena Nyman. Its plot follows a celebrated classical pianist and her neglected daughter who meet for the first time in years, and chronicles their painful discussions of how they have hurt each other. It was the only collaboration between Ingrid Bergman and Ingmar Bergman (who were not related[2]).[3]
Autumn Sonata was the last of Ingmar Bergman's films to be made for theatrical exhibition; all of his films made after it, even those screened in theatres, were television productions.[4]
Eva, wife of the village pastor, invites her mother Charlotte for a visit to her village. She has not seen her for over seven years. Her mother is a world-renowned pianist, somewhat eccentric, aging, and has survived several husbands. Eva is not as talented as the mother (despite the fact that she has written two books and plays the piano passably). Eva's main concern is to be the mistress of her home, wife, mother, and loving sister. It is gradually learned through her dialogue with her mother that her life has had a large number of unfortunate setbacks: she respects but does not love her husband Viktor, their son Erik drowned one day short of what would have been his fourth birthday, and Charlotte never appears to have loved Eva as a mother normally loves a daughter. As part of her day-to-day life, Eva takes care of her disabled and paralyzed sister Helena, whom she has taken out of the hospital into her own home. She appears to be the only person who can understand her sister's limited speech ability.
The presence of Helena in Eva's house is shocking to the aging mother. She makes a gift of her own wristwatch to Helena, and listens to Eva playing Prelude No. 2 in A minor by Chopin. She immediately re-performs the same prelude after Eva finishes in her own preferred interpretation of the music. Before going to bed, Charlotte decides to make a gift of her own car to her daughter. She plans to take a flight home, and buy a new car for herself, as a measure of her altruism. At night, Charlotte wakes up from a nightmare: it seems that Eva is choking her. She goes into the living room followed by Eva, who had heard her mother screaming from the nightmare.
Mother and daughter begin an impassioned rediscovery and clarification of their past relationship. Eva's husband overhears this unexpectedly heightened exchange but decides not to participate or interfere. Hearing this impassioned exchange, her disabled younger sister painfully forces herself out of her bed and starts crawling up to the stairs to where Eva and Charlotte are arguing. Upon reaching the landing she starts shouting, "Mama, come!"
In the morning Charlotte prepares for her departure. Eva goes to the grave of her departed son, and her husband ineffectively tries to soothe her ailing sister. Charlotte asks for a friend to escort her away by train. While speaking to her agent Paul on the train, she begins to question the unfortunate fate of her disabled and paralyzed daughter, asking the unanswerable question: "Why couldn't she die?" Her older daughter sends her mother a letter starting with: "I realize that I wronged you." The mother apparently reads the letter that concludes by leaving open the possibility of a future reconciliation, though the closing shot is of Viktor putting the letter in the envelope, leaving the possibility that he, or Eva, merely envisioned Charlotte reading the letter.
Due to his battle with the Swedish tax authorities at the time, Ingmar Bergman produced Autumn Sonata through his West German company, Personafilm GmbH, with main financing from Lew Grade's British ITC Film, and shot the film in an old film studio outside Oslo in Norway.[5] Although formally a German production (with the German title, Herbstsonate, being the official original title), the dialogue is in Swedish, most of the crew and actors were Swedish,[6] and the world premiere was in Stockholm.[7]
Peter Cowie, in the notes to the Criterion DVD edition of the film, summarizes the production, stating: "Shot in Norway, with British and American backing, and featuring Swedish dialogue, Autumn Sonata emerged from one of the darkest spells in Ingmar Bergman's life. In 1976 he had gone into voluntary exile in Munich after being accused of evading tax on the income from certain films... Autumn Sonata... marks the swan song of Ingrid Bergman’s career, fulfilled her long-held desire to make a film with her namesake."[8]
The piano piece in the film is Frédéric Chopin's Prelude No. 2 in A minor played by Käbi Laretei, whose hands are shown whenever Ingrid Bergman is depicted playing the piano.
In the Chicago Reader, Dave Kehr opined that Autumn Sonata "makes good chamber music: it's a crafted miniature with Bergman's usual bombast built, for once, into the plot requirements."[9] Conversely, Gary Arnold of The Washington Post felt that its story was "a dubious variation on familiar neurotic themes" in Bergman's work, but also wrote that "one can be impressed by Bergman's instrumentalists while rejecting his composition. ... Autumn Sonata enjoys instant status as an acting showcase."[10] Film critic Roger Ebert ranked the film at No. 5 in his list of 10 Best Films of 1978.[11]
Retrospective evaluation is favorable. In 2002, Keith Phipps of The A.V. Club wrote, "When it was released in 1978, Ingmar Bergman's Autumn Sonata received positive to indifferent reviews, written off by many as a minor work from a great director. ... With the burden of high expectations lifted, Autumn Sonata can finally be seen as an austerely beautiful meditation on death and the not-always-realized possibility of reconciliation across generations."[12] The film has an 87% rating on Rotten Tomatoes from 30 reviews with the consensus: "A melancholy meditation on the unresolvable tension between parent and child, Autumn Sonata is a fitting swan song for the great Ingrid Bergman."[13]
Award | Date of ceremony | Category | Recipient(s) | Result | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Academy Awards | 9 April 1979 | Best Actress | Ingrid Bergman | [14] | |
Best Writing (Screenplay Written Directly for the Screen) | Ingmar Bergman | ||||
Bodil Awards | 1979 | Best Non-American Film | [15] | ||
César Awards | 1979 | Best Foreign Film | [16] | ||
David di Donatello Awards | 1979 | Best Foreign Actress | Ingrid Bergman & Liv Ullmann | ||
Golden Globe Awards | 1978 | Best Actress in a Motion Picture – Drama | Ingrid Bergman | [17] | |
Best Foreign Language Film | |||||
Los Angeles Film Critics Association | 16 December 1978 | Best Actress | Ingrid Bergman | ||
Best Foreign Language Film | Autumn Sonata | ||||
Nastro d'Argento Awards | 1979 | Best Foreign Director | Ingmar Bergman | ||
National Board of Review | 19 December 1978 | Best Director | Ingmar Bergman | [18] | |
Best Actress | Ingrid Bergman | ||||
Best Foreign Language Film | |||||
Top Foreign Language Film | |||||
National Society of Film Critics | 4 January 1979 | Best Actress | Ingrid Bergman | [19] | |
New York Film Critics Circle | 28 January 1979 | Best Director | Ingmar Bergman | [20] | |
Best Actress | Ingrid Bergman | ||||
Best Foreign Language Film | |||||