Cries and Whispers


Cries and Whispers Swedish Viskningar och rop , lit. Whispers and Cries is a 1972 Swedish film written and directed by Ingmar Bergman and starring Harriet Andersson, Kari Sylwan, Ingrid Thulin and Liv Ullmann. The film is set at a mansion at the end of the 19th century and is about two sisters and a maid who watch over their third sister on her deathbed, torn between fearing she might die and hoping that she will. After several unsuccessful experimental films, Cries and Whispers was a critical and commercial success. It received nominations for five Academy Awards. These included a nomination for Best Picture, which was unusual for a foreignlanguage film.

Cries and Whispers takes place in a lavish mansion in the 19th century, filled with red carpets and white statuary. It depicts the final days of Agnes Harriet Andersson, who is near death due to cancer. Her sisters Maria Liv Ullmann and Karin Ingrid Thulin have returned to the family home to be with her. However the two women remain distant and awkward, struggling to comfort their sister while dealing with the shock and the fear of mortality Agnes death may bring. The deeply religious maid Anna Kari Sylwan, whose own daughter died at an early age, is the only person in the house able to comfort the dying woman. At length Agnes dies and during her wake the priest Anders Ek declares Agnes faith was stronger than his own. In a dreamlike sequence that follows Agnes seemingly returns to life for a short moment and asks her sisters one last time for the love and care denied her during her lifetime. For a moment Karin, Maria and Agnes grow closer to each other, but this is shortlived when the two sisters realize that Agnes is actually dead, with Karin declaring such acts morbid and disgusting. Once again only Anna is able to embrace and comfort Agnes.The film is characterized by flashbacks that visit the characters lives and their memories, tracing each womans personality to the childhood they spent together. Maria remembers her affair with a handsome doctor juxtaposed with her failed marriage to her ineffectual husband Agnes remembers her unrequited devotion to their distant mother and Karin struggles with selfharm, selfmutilating her sexual organs to drive her husband away. The last flashback, from the deceased Agnes point of view, is narrated via her diary and shows her sisters descending upon the house clad in white, like angels. The last words are Agnes whispering, Come what may, this is happiness. I cannot wish for anything better. Now, for a few minutes, I can experience perfection. And I feel profoundly grateful to my life, which gives me so much... ........

Source: Wikipedia


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