For this episode of The CriterionCast, Scott, David, and Trevor join to discuss Ingmar Bergman's Persona.

 


This time on the podcast, Scott Nye, David Blakeslee, and Trevor Berrett discuss Ingmar Bergman’s Persona.


By the midsixties, Ingmar Bergman had already conjured many of the cinema’s most unforgettable images. But with the radical Persona, he attained new levels of visual poetry. In the first of a series of legendary performances for Bergman, Liv Ullmann plays a stage actor who has inexplicably gone mute; an equally mesmerizing Bibi Andersson is the garrulous young nurse caring for her in a remote island cottage. While isolated together there, the women undergo a mysterious spiritual and emotional transference. Performed with astonishing nuance and shot in stark contrast and soft light by Sven Nykvist, the influential Persona is a penetrating, dreamlike work of profound psychological depth.


Episode Links

Persona (1966) – The Criterion Collection
Three Reasons: Persona
“The Persistance of Persona” – Thomas Elsaesser
10 Things I Learned: Persona – Abbey Lustgarten
Persona (1966) – IMDb
Persona (1966) – Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia
David’s review of Persona – Criterion Reflections
Trevor’s review of Persona – The Mookse and the Gripes
Roger Ebert’s review of Persona

Episode Credits

Scott Nye (Twitter/Website)
David Blakeslee (Twitter/Website)
Trevor Berrett (Twitter/Website)

Twitter Mentions