Cries and Whispers
Cries and Whispers (Swedish: Viskningar och rop) is a 1972 Swedish drama film written and directed by Ingmar Bergman, starring Harriet Andersson as the terminally ill Agnes, Ingrid Thulin as her sister Karin, Liv Ullmann as sister Maria, and Kari Sylwan as the family maid Anna.[1][2] Set in a rural manor house in early 20th-century Sweden, the film depicts the sisters' vigil over Agnes as she succumbs to cancer, unearthing buried resentments, guilt, and fleeting moments of reconciliation amid profound emotional isolation.[2][3] Bergman's screenplay draws from personal reflections on mortality and familial bonds, employing a dominant red color palette to symbolize the raw interiority of the soul and blood ties.[1][4] Cinematographer Sven Nykvist's work earned the Academy Award for Best Cinematography, with the film receiving additional Oscar nominations for Best Picture, Best Director, Best Actress (Andersson), and Best Original Screenplay—one of the earliest foreign-language films to contend for Best Picture.[5] Produced on a modest budget by Cinematograph AB, it was filmed primarily at Taxinge-Näsby Castle, emphasizing claustrophobic intimacy through long takes and close-ups that capture unspoken psychological tensions.[1][6] Critically acclaimed for its unflinching portrayal of human anguish without sentimentality, Cries and Whispers exemplifies Bergman's mastery in probing existential despair through precise visual and performative realism.[2][7]Synopsis
Plot Summary
In early 20th-century Sweden, Agnes lies dying of cancer in her family's manor house, tended by the longtime maid Anna.[3] Her sisters, Maria and Karin, arrive at the estate to care for her during her final days.[8] Interspersed with the present events are flashbacks revealing personal histories: Maria recalls attempting to seduce the family doctor, who rebuffs her advances; Karin remembers a night of marital discord in which she cuts her genitals with broken glass and smears the blood on her nightgown before rejecting her husband's touch.[8] [7] Anna reads aloud from Agnes's diary, which recounts reflections on family life and her advancing illness.[8] Agnes endures excruciating pain, crying out for her sisters, who struggle to provide comfort.[8] She dies in agony amid screams that echo through the house.[8] Following Agnes's death, her body is prepared for burial.[8] That night, Anna experiences a vision in which the seemingly resurrected Agnes emerges from her coffin, pleading for embrace; the sisters recoil in horror and cannot console her, but Anna holds her tenderly.[8] The next morning, Maria and Karin discuss funeral arrangements with detachment, unable to offer each other solace, before departing the estate; Anna, dismissed with minimal compensation, retains Agnes's diary and reads an entry describing a cherished moment of familial harmony in the garden.[8][1]Characters and Setting
Cries and Whispers unfolds within the confines of an isolated mansion in rural Sweden during the early 1900s, utilizing the Taxinge-Näsby estate near Mariefred as its primary location.[6] The estate's grand yet enclosed architecture, characterized by its two-story structure and surrounding grounds, establishes a spatially restricted environment that intensifies the characters' interactions.[9] This setting, devoid of specific historical events, evokes a pre-modern familial milieu where external influences remain minimal.[10] Agnes serves as the narrative's focal point, a terminally ill woman whose physical decline from cancer necessitates the gathering of her sisters and prompts sequences of caregiving and confrontation.[3] Her condition deteriorates progressively, marked by episodes of severe pain that elicit varied responses from those around her, driving the progression of familial revelations through bedside vigils and diary entries.[2] Maria, Agnes's younger sister, arrives at the mansion to offer comfort, engaging in tentative gestures of affection toward Agnes and attempting to bridge emotional gaps with Karin via nostalgic recollections.[11] Her interactions, including a flashback depicting an encounter with the family doctor, highlight efforts at reconciliation amid underlying relational strains.[12] Karin, the other sister, maintains a more aloof presence, performing dutiful visits to Agnes's bedside but exhibiting resentment through withdrawn behavior and solitary rituals, such as self-inflicted gestures of isolation.[11] Her exchanges with Maria escalate tensions, revealing entrenched hostilities that surface during Agnes's final hours.[10] Anna, the longtime family servant, undertakes the bulk of Agnes's physical care, administering massages, prayers, and nocturnal attendance that contrast with the sisters' emotional reticence.[3] Her devoted actions, including a pivotal post-mortem embrace, anchor the story's intimate caregiving dynamics.[2] Peripheral characters include the doctor, who conducts examinations of Agnes and interacts privately with Maria, and a pastor appearing in a flashback to convey condolences after the mother's death, both serving to punctuate the core female interactions without sustained involvement.[12][13]Production
Development and Script
Ingmar Bergman conceived the idea for Cries and Whispers by April 1970, with an initial recurring image of "a room draped all in red with women clad in white" that had haunted him for years.[1] He began outlining the screenplay in earnest after completing The Touch in spring 1971, retreating to "almost hermetic isolation" on the island of Fårö from late March to early June 1971 to compose it in the form of a prose story rather than traditional dialogue-heavy script pages.[14] The first notebook entry, dated 16 April 1970, referenced the character name "Anna," signaling the emergence of the four central female figures amid themes of emotional repression.[1] Bergman initially described the script as a "self-portrait" of his mother, Karin Åkerblom, drawing from his observations of silence and unspoken tensions in his family upbringing, though he later retracted this in a 2004 documentary, calling it a "lie for the media" and insisting the film centered on the characters Agnes, Anna, and Maria independently.[1] This period of writing coincided with Bergman's personal introspection on mortality, influenced by his mother's death in 1966 and broader existential concerns, though he emphasized the work's roots in visual and atmospheric experimentation over direct biography.[1] The title originated from a music critic's description of Mozart's Piano Concerto No. 14 (K. 449) as evoking "cries and whispers," capturing the screenplay's emphasis on suppressed emotions conveyed through gesture and silence rather than overt speech.[1] From inception, Bergman collaborated closely with cinematographer Sven Nykvist, promising him the completed script by 4 June 1971—which he delivered on time—and discussing visual priorities like intimate close-ups, color saturation, and subtle zoom-ins to prioritize facial expressions over dialogue.[1] This partnership shaped the script's structure, integrating technical innovations such as filters and lighting tests to evoke psychological intimacy from the outset.[1]Casting Choices
Ingmar Bergman selected his frequent collaborators Liv Ullmann for the role of Maria, Ingrid Thulin for Karin, and Harriet Andersson for Agnes, drawing on their established working relationships and capacities for nuanced emotional portrayal developed across prior films such as Persona (1966) for Ullmann, Winter Light (1963) for Thulin, and Through a Glass Darkly (1961) for Andersson.[1] These choices reflected Bergman's practice of assembling a trusted ensemble to explore intricate psychological states, with casting decisions integrated into the scriptwriting phase to ensure alignment between performers' strengths and character demands.[1] For the maid Anna, Bergman cast Kari Sylwan, a dancer who had recently appeared in his television adaptations of A Dream Play (1967) and The Ghost Sonata (1969), valuing her physical expressiveness to embody the character's tactile, devoted presence amid the sisters' emotional detachment.[1] Sylwan's background in dance provided a raw, bodily contrast to the restrained performances required of the leads, emphasizing non-verbal communication through movement.[1] Andersson, in particular, demonstrated readiness for the role's demands by committing to the graphic depiction of Agnes's suffering, aligning with Bergman's emphasis on authentic vulnerability in rehearsals.[15] The film's structure intentionally minimized major male roles, limited to brief appearances by Erland Josephson and others, to center interpersonal dynamics among the women and underscore failures in familial intimacy without external masculine intervention.[1] Bergman had expressed a preference for female leads, stating that women offered greater expressiveness for conveying inner turmoil, a rationale evident in the all-female core cast focused on themes of repression and isolation.[16]Filming Process
Principal photography for Cries and Whispers occurred over 42 days during late summer and early autumn 1971 at Taxinge-Näsby manor house near Mariefred, Sweden, shifting from Bergman's initial plan to build interiors at Filmhuset studios.[10][1] The production maintained a tight schedule with a small crew of 8 to 10 members and a budget of approximately $300,000 to $400,000, administering gamma globulin injections to cast and crew to avert illnesses.[17][1] Cinematographer Sven Nykvist prioritized natural lighting, particularly at dawn and dusk, to enhance realism in scenes depicting Agnes's terminal illness, supplemented by filters to manage color film's tendency toward excess saturation in low-light conditions.[1] Technical challenges included mitigating harsh reflections from the dominant red sets during close-ups and extensive pre-shooting tests for filters and lab processing to achieve desired tones.[1] Bergman introduced a zoom lens for the first time, employing it subtly to maintain compositional intimacy without disrupting the film's painterly aesthetic.[1] Bergman directed actors through intensive rehearsals and precise instructions to evoke raw emotional and physical intensity, such as guiding Harriet Andersson in her awakening sequence to convey vulnerability.[1] Andersson's portrayal of Agnes's cancer agony drew from personal observation of her father's death, with the death scene filmed early under rented high-intensity lights to capture unfiltered suffering in extended takes.[18] The production emphasized single-source lighting to avoid unnatural shadows, fostering a collaborative, family-like atmosphere that supported the film's focus on unsparing human anguish.[17]
Artistic Elements
Cinematography and Color Use
Sven Nykvist's cinematography in Cries and Whispers (1972), for which he received the Academy Award for Best Cinematography, emphasized naturalistic lighting and composition to support the film's intimate chamber-drama structure. Nykvist employed a single light source whenever possible, drawing illumination from the red-painted interiors themselves to minimize shadows and achieve a seamless, unlit appearance.[17] This approach relied on the reflective properties of the sets rather than additional fixtures, producing soft, diffused light that highlighted facial contours without artificial harshness.[19] The film's predominant deep red color palette was realized through the physical red-draped rooms, avoiding the use of color filters to prevent unnatural saturation.[19] These interiors served as the primary visual motif, with cinematographer Nykvist and director Ingmar Bergman experimenting with color film's inherent tendencies toward over-saturation by adjusting makeup to counteract reflective glare from the red surfaces.[1] Shot on 35mm film stock, the visuals captured fine grain textures in skin and fabrics, enhancing the tactile quality of close-up compositions that dominated the framing.[20] Bergman and Nykvist incorporated subtle zoom-ins via a zoom lens—the first such use in a Bergman film—for discreet emphasis on emotional details, alongside slow fades and dissolves tinted in red to transition between scenes and temporal shifts.[1] These techniques blurred spatial and narrative boundaries while maintaining compositional precision, with dawn and dusk exteriors lit softly around faces using corrective filters to temper color film's excesses.[1] The result was a visually unified aesthetic prioritizing human-scale intimacy over expansive vistas.[17]Sound and Musical Score
The sound design in Cries and Whispers creates a minimalist audio environment dominated by silence, punctuated by diegetic elements such as heavy breathing, whispers, and screams that intensify the portrayal of emotional anguish and isolation.[21] These sounds, reflective of the film's title, were crafted by sound mixer Owe Svensson to evoke raw human vulnerability, with sparse dialogue functioning more as an accent to the ambient quietude than a narrative driver.[21] Ticking clocks and other subtle environmental noises further reinforce the oppressive stillness, drawing attention to the characters' internal voids and failed intimacies.[1] In lieu of a composed orchestral score, the film incorporates pre-existing source music to underscore melancholy without overt embellishment. Johann Sebastian Bach's Sarabande from Cello Suite No. 5 in C minor, BWV 1011, serves as a recurring non-diegetic motif, appearing during pivotal moments like a temporary sisterly reconciliation where it overlays and mutes spoken words to emphasize cathartic yet illusory harmony.[1][21] This selective use of Bach, alongside references to Frédéric Chopin's mazurkas in Bergman's creative process, prioritizes emotional resonance over continuous musical layering, allowing silences to dominate and highlight relational fractures.[1] The approach, praised by Andrei Tarkovsky for its structural potency in bridging auditory gaps, avoids traditional scoring to maintain focus on the unadorned human voice and its absences.[21]Themes and Interpretations
Family Relations and Emotional Isolation
In Cries and Whispers, the bonds between sisters Karin, Maria, and Agnes manifest as chronic emotional and physical detachment, with Karin explicitly rejecting tactile comfort by pulling away from Agnes's grasp during her agony, while Maria offers fleeting, insincere gestures driven by personal unease rather than empathy.[22][23] This failure stems from entrenched childhood patterns of rivalry and selective maternal attention, as depicted in Agnes's diary entries and flashback sequences set against the film's 1907 timeline, where the mother's affectionate gaze favors the compliant Agnes over the defiant Karin, embedding resentment that causal chains into adult relational paralysis.[14][22] Anna, the family's long-serving maid, assumes a surrogate maternal function that blood relations cannot fulfill, methodically tending to Agnes's needs—including bathing and cradling her in moments of crisis—through disciplined obligation rather than affective sentiment, which enables a rare instance of reciprocal closeness absent among the sisters.[14][23] Her efficacy underscores how duty-bound service circumvents the expressive inhibitions plaguing the bourgeois sisters, whose inherited legacies of parental emotional austerity—evident in the mother's distant demeanor toward Karin—perpetuate a cycle of withheld intimacy.[24] The narrative indicts upper-class family units for cultivating such hypocrisy, where facades of propriety mask underlying repression, leading to verifiable breakdowns in solidarity, as the sisters prioritize inheritance disputes over collective mourning post-Agnes's death.[25] This portrayal draws from director Ingmar Bergman's autobiographical reflections on his own middle-child position between an older brother and younger sister, marked by feelings of displacement from parental focus and resultant sibling tensions that echoed in his depictions of familial discord.[26][24]Suffering, Death, and Spiritual Longing
The film depicts Agnes's terminal uterine cancer as an inexorable physical ordeal, manifesting in raw sequences of bodily convulsions, vomiting, and desperate cries for maternal comfort, underscoring the unvarnished brutality of disease without mitigation or symbolism.[27] These portrayals draw from observed human mortality, with actress Harriet Andersson's performance capturing the visceral finality of organ failure in a pre-antibiotic era, where such agonies paralleled common tubercular deaths through cachexia and respiratory distress.[16] Bergman's direction eschews transcendence, presenting suffering as a mechanistic breakdown of flesh rather than a pathway to enlightenment, aligned with his view that "the actual process of death is more hideous than the meaning of death."[10] Following Agnes's death on an unspecified autumn night in the family estate, a hallucinatory vision unfolds wherein her corpse animates, reaching out to maid Anna in pleas for embrace, interpreted not as supernatural resurrection but as a psychological echo of unresolved longing amid isolation.[10] Bergman, a lifelong agnostic raised in a strict Lutheran household by a chaplain father, framed this sequence as emblematic of death's "ultimate loneliness," rejecting mystical redemption in favor of human projection born from grief and denial.[8] He later quipped it rendered the film "technically a zombie film," emphasizing grotesque realism over otherworldly hope, countering interpretations that romanticize it as spiritual epiphany.[10] The subsequent pastor's visitation ritual exposes institutionalized faith's emptiness, as the officiant delivers rote consolations—"In your life He found you worthy of bearing a long and tortuous agony"—to the devout Anna, whose personal piety, rooted in tactile comforts like clutching a locket of her deceased child, stands in stark contrast to clerical detachment.[28] This scene critiques hollow ecclesiastical forms against instinctive human responses to loss, reflecting Bergman's upbringing under rigid Protestant doctrine yet affirming no divine solace, only the void of empirical finality.[8] Scholarly analyses uphold this as a demystification of suffering's search for purpose, prioritizing observable despair over transcendent narratives.[27]Intimacy, Gender, and Human Connection
In Cries and Whispers, Ingmar Bergman portrays intimacy as a fraught endeavor, frequently undermined by emotional barriers and self-protective instincts among the female characters. Karin's flashback reveals her deliberate self-mutilation with a shard of broken glass inserted into her vagina, followed by smearing the blood across her face and genitals before lying beside her husband, thereby sabotaging their marital sexual duty and underscoring a visceral rejection of physical vulnerability within traditional spousal roles.[27][8] This act, occurring amid a strained diplomatic marriage, exemplifies how internalized expectations of wifely obligation can foster repression and mutual antagonism rather than connection, with Karin's triumphant smile signaling not empowerment but entrenched isolation.[27] Maria's interactions further illustrate failed attempts at closeness, as her flirtatious overtures—such as caressing Karin's face in a rare moment of tentative reconciliation—are rebuffed or later disavowed, revealing superficial eros driven by personal vanity rather than genuine bridging of isolation.[8] Gender dynamics in the film depict women navigating patriarchal constraints, evident in the sisters' distant husbands and the peripheral, ineffective male figures like the doctor and chaplain, yet Bergman evidences mutual selfishness transcending victimhood narratives: Maria's infidelity precipitates her husband's suicide attempt, while Karin's hostility extends beyond external pressures to inherent emotional unavailability.[27] This critiques idealized conservative views of roles as inherently redemptive, showing instead how they enable reciprocal failures in empathy and touch. Contrasting these eros-tainted erosions of connection, Anna's nude embrace of the dying Agnes—cradling her against her bare breast and kissing her amid agonized cries—represents a rare instance of selfless, agape-like intimacy, offering physical solace unmarred by egoism and evoking maternal tenderness amid suffering.[14][8] Repeated post-mortem in a Pietà-like tableau, this act highlights intimacy's potential for redemption through raw human caregiving, aligning with Bergman's emphasis on the primal need for touch over ideological framings of gender or duty.[14][29] Yet even here, the film's close-ups on flesh and fluid underscore the precariousness of such moments against pervasive repression, where traditional roles amplify but do not solely cause the characters' incapacity for sustained closeness.[27]Release
Premiere and Distribution Challenges
The film had its world premiere in New York on December 21, 1972, ahead of its Swedish release on March 5, 1973, at the Spegeln cinema in Göteborg.[1] It was subsequently screened out of competition at the 1973 Cannes Film Festival, where it garnered attention for its emotional intensity.[1] Distribution faced significant hurdles due to the film's unflinching portrayal of suffering, including graphic death scenes depicting cancer's ravages, which deterred major U.S. distributors even when Bergman sought a modest advance of $75,000. Rights were ultimately secured by Roger Corman's New World Pictures, a smaller outfit known for riskier arthouse and exploitation fare, reflecting the perceived commercial barriers posed by the content's unrelenting dread and taboos around mortality.[1] Initial rollout involved limited arthouse screenings amid concerns over audience alienation from its claustrophobic focus on pain and familial dysfunction, contributing to underwhelming box office returns relative to production costs despite festival buzz.[10] Bergman circumvented potential creative interference by largely self-financing the $1.5 million Swedish kronor budget through his Cinematograph company, supplemented by partial Swedish Film Institute support and personal investments from key cast and crew, who waived upfront fees in exchange for profit shares.[1] This approach preserved his artistic control but amplified financial risks tied to the project's uncertain market viability.Restorations and Modern Availability
In 2015, The Criterion Collection issued a Blu-ray edition of Cries and Whispers incorporating a new 2K digital restoration supervised from original 35mm materials, which enhanced color reproduction—particularly the film's signature red palette—and sharpened fine details in shadows and textures, thereby highlighting cinematographer Sven Nykvist's subtle manipulation of natural and candlelight sources.[2] This process preserved the original monaural soundtrack in uncompressed form, avoiding modern audio enhancements that could alter Bergman's intended sparse sound design.[30] The restored version facilitated broader theatrical reintroductions, including a 2022 50th anniversary rerelease in the United Kingdom organized by the British Film Institute, where screenings utilized the 2K master to project the film in its original 1.66:1 aspect ratio across select cinemas starting April 1.[31] Similar anniversary presentations occurred at festivals like the Toronto International Film Festival, employing the same restoration for large-format viewings that empirically demonstrated improved visibility of Nykvist's chiaroscuro effects, such as the interplay of crimson walls against pale skin tones, without introducing digital artifacts or color grading deviations from the 1972 negative.[32] As of 2025, the film remains accessible via digital streaming platforms including the Criterion Channel, HBO Max, and Kanopy, alongside rental options on Amazon Prime Video, enabling global viewing without modifications to Bergman's director's cut or narrative structure.[33] These platforms typically stream the 2015-restored version, which has sustained the film's availability for scholarly analysis and home audiences by mitigating degradation from analog prints used in earlier decades.[34] No substantive edits or censored footage have been reinstated or excised in these modern distributions, maintaining fidelity to the original 91-minute runtime.[35]Reception
Contemporary Critical Views
Roger Ebert, in his February 1973 review for the Chicago Sun-Times, awarded the film four out of four stars, describing how it "envelops us in a tomb of dread, pain and hate" yet counters these with "selfless love," highlighting its emotional intensity and humanistic resolution amid suffering.[8] Pauline Kael, writing for The New Yorker in late 1972, praised Bergman's evocation of the "mystery of the flesh" through sensual imagery and performances but critiqued the film's excess in depicting unrelenting pain, likening it to a perverse extension of his classical style bordering on Grand Guignol excess without sufficient narrative balance.[16] Critics lauded the film's innovative cinematography—particularly Sven Nykvist's use of crimson tones to symbolize emotional turmoil—as a stylistic breakthrough that intensified its chamber-drama intimacy, distinguishing it from Bergman's prior black-and-white works.[8] However, others faulted its masochistic indulgence in morbidity, arguing the unrelieved focus on physical and spiritual agony lacked redemptive insight or broader philosophical resolution, rendering the sisters' isolation more histrionic than profoundly cathartic.[16] Among ideological divides, conservative-leaning reviewers occasionally decried the film's secular despair as emblematic of Bergman's godless existentialism, viewing the characters' futile longing for transcendence as a bleak rejection of traditional faith without affirming moral order. In contrast, some left-leaning and early feminist critics appreciated its portrayal of female agency and solidarity amid patriarchal constraints, interpreting the women's intimate bonds and endurance of suffering as a subversive critique of emotional repression in bourgeois society, though not without noting Bergman's male gaze in objectifying their bodies.[36]Awards and Honors
_Cries and Whispers received five nominations at the 46th Academy Awards in 1974, including Best Picture, Best Director for Ingmar Bergman, Best Original Screenplay for Bergman, and Best Costume Design for Marik Vos; it won Best Cinematography for Sven Nykvist.[37][38] The Best Picture nomination marked only the fourth time a foreign-language film had been recognized in that category, underscoring the film's artistic impact beyond linguistic barriers. At the National Board of Review Awards for 1973, the film earned Bergman the Best Director prize and recognition as one of the year's top foreign-language films.[39] It was nominated for Best Foreign Language Film at the 30th Golden Globe Awards in 1973.[40] In Sweden, Cries and Whispers won the Guldbagge Award for Best Film at the 9th ceremony on October 29, 1973, with Harriet Andersson also receiving Best Actress for her role as Agnes. These honors affirmed the film's technical mastery and emotional depth, enhancing Bergman's global stature amid his ongoing explorations of human suffering.[5]| Award | Category | Recipient | Result | Year |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Academy Awards | Best Cinematography | Sven Nykvist | Won | 1974 |
| Academy Awards | Best Picture | Ingmar Bergman (producer) | Nominated | 1974 |
| National Board of Review | Best Director | Ingmar Bergman | Won | 1973 |
| Guldbagge Awards | Best Film | Ingmar Bergman | Won | 1973 |