Some films are best
appreciated as the vessels that deliver extraordinary performances, and Ingmar
Bergman’s probing psychological drama Face
to Face is an example. Liv Ullman, one of Bergman’s most frequent
collaborators, renders an extraordinary characterization as a woman succumbing
to madness. Her portrayal climaxes in an epic-length crying/laughing jag that
represents some of the most vulnerable work you’ll ever encounter in a
movie—like all the best actors, she creates the illusion that she’s peeled off
her skin, metaphorically speaking, to let viewers she the blood and viscera
pumping underneath. The resulting sense of connection between actor and viewer
is powerful to experience. The same cannot necessarily be said of the film as a
whole. Although Ullman is in nearly every scene and remains compelling
throughout, the story is a fairly standard iteration of Bergman’s style.
Dr.
Jenny Isaksson (Ullman) is a psychiatrist stuck in an unsatisfying marriage, so
when she meets suave Dr. Tomas Jacobi (Erland Josephson) at a party, she
indulges his romantic overtures—up to a point. After a first date during which
she startles Tomas by asking clinical questions about his planned technique for
sexual conquest, she later tests his interest even further by having a major
breakdown in his presence. Eventually, Jenny’s torment leads her to attempt
suicide, and that lands her in a psych ward. Amazingly, Tomas remains loyal to
her, visiting Jenny on a regular basis while she wrestles with her demons.
Since Bergman was never a sentimentalist, he’s not after the notion that love
conquers all—Face to Face expresses
something closer to the idea that love makes the pain of existence
incrementally more tolerable.
Along the way to articulating that mildly
comforting expression, Bergman visits many dark places. Interestingly, the
vignettes that connect most strongly in Face
to Face are the unadorned ones, where Bergman employs nothing but acting
and mise-en-scène, even though Face to
Face contains a long surrealistic sequence that recalls the visually
experimental Bergman of old—shades of The
Seventh Seal (1957). The surrealistic sequence takes viewers inside Jenny’s
mind. Wearing a metaphorically rich red dress, she drifts through pieces of her
life, for instance raging at her parents. This sequence represents a noble
attempt at bringing a character’s interior life to the surface, but it’s
perhaps too linear and obvious to genuinely evoke a disturbed mental state.
Plus, as with many of Bergman’s dramas, there’s the overarching aesthetic
question of how much emotional horror an audience should be asked to endure.
Beyond Jenny’s breakdown, her suicide attempt, her institutionalization, and
her wrenching dream sequence, Face to
Face also includes an attempted rape and various scenes of interpersonal
cruelty. Face to Face is tough to get
through, and not every viewer will agree it’s worth the investment of attention
and endurance.
Face to Face: GROOVY
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