Event detail
The Phantom Carriage
Film - Feature | September 22 | 8-9:40 p.m. | Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive
BAMPFA
Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive
Ingmar Bergman called Victor Sjöströms film the keystone of my cinematographic world. Film historian Peter Cowie observes: By 1920, Sjöström was at the peak of his career. He was eager to experiment with form, even if it meant tampering with the work of one of Swedens most respected authors, the Nobel Prizewinning Selma Lagerlöf. The film creates a complex flashback structure in adapting the morality tale of a drunkard (played by Sjöström himself). Its startlingly inventive visual technique, in Cowies words, demonstrates that Julius Jaenzon was as brilliant a cinematographer in his time as Sven Nykvist.
CA, bampfapress@berkeley.edu, 5106420808