THE REAPING OF DEATH IN “THE SEVENTH seal ” BY INGMAR BERGMAN (to commemorate the 60th anniversary of the film creation)
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St Petersburg State University
Abstract
Medieval aesthetics, mysticism, sheer symbolism and special stylistics of “The Seventh
Seal” (1956) distinguish this film from other ‘historiographical’ works made by
the Scandinavian director and thinker, Ingmar Berman (1918–2007). In spite of the
historical background of Bergman’s works, none of them can be called, without reserve,
strictly historical. According to art critics, “The Seventh Seal” has had the greatest impact
on all films about the history of the Middle Ages and culture. It is not history as
such that the Swedish director and thinker is concerned about; rather, he is interested
in existential topics, problems tormenting his heroes, their quests, their doubts and
anxieties. Here, likewise in all other ‘historiographical’ pictures made by Bergman, the
historical realities serve as a background against which the drama is being acted out.
The film has nothing to do with the so-called pre-expectant idealization of the culture
of the knightly Middle Ages. The authors of this essay discuss the symbolic nature of
Death in “The Seventh Seal”, Antonius Block’s behaviour, when he faces the Angel of
Death, and the behaviour of other characters featured in the film. For a genuine knight,
whose cause should be that of devotion, Block as a personification of doubt and search
is a ‘wrong kind’ of knight. Isolated from the world, alone to grapple with his doubts,
Block realizes that all that has happened to him is futile, meaningless, and that he must
grasp something essential to fill his spiritual void. “The Seventh Seal” is the most ‘panmortal’
picture wrought by Bergman. Death reigns supreme in the world depicted by
the Master. The ‘finale’ of the article raises the issue of the characters who, though deeply
involved, do not appear in Dödsdansen of the Epilogue.