Major Ingmar Bergman centenary retrospective announced at BFI Southbank

Classics such as The Seventh Seal, Wild Strawberries and Persona will be back on the big screen to mark the great auteur’s centenary.

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The Seventh Seal (1957)

The Seventh Seal (1957)

As part of the global celebrations of the centenary of world-renowned Swedish filmmaker Ingmar Bergman (1918-2007), we’ll be embarking on a major season of his work at BFI Southbank from 1 January – mid-March 2018.

This comprehensive retrospective will include everything Bergman wrote for the screen, taking in well-known features such as The Seventh Seal (1957), Wild Strawberries (1957) and Persona (1966), as well as lesser-known works such as his English language film The Touch (1971), starring Elliot Gould, Bibi Andersson and Max von Sydow.

Also screening will be the groundbreaking TV series Scenes from a Marriage (1973), starring frequent collaborator Liv Ullmann, and the award-winning Fanny and Alexander (1983). Bergman transformed the way people thought about film as an expressive and profound art form rather than as just entertainment; his great cinematic works of art are deeply personal films that no one else could have made.

Screenings will be accompanied by an ambitious programme of discussions, talent-led events and immersive experiences, bringing Bergman and his work to life for a new generation. The season will be programmed thematically, so as to better offer audiences a route into Bergman’s huge back-catalogue, with strands dealing with such themes as romantic relationships, families, women and the injustices of the world. 

Fanny and Alexander (1982)

Fanny and Alexander (1982)

Also included will be a UK-wide re-release of his version of Mozart’s much-loved opera The Magic Flute (1975). Light, funny and charming, it was originally made for Swedish television, but was so popular that a theatrical version was in high demand, and the film was released worldwide to huge acclaim including an Academy Award nomination.

The release of The Magic Flute in February will follow previews in December at BFI Southbank. More theatrical releases will be announced in due course. The season will offer audiences a chance to reappraise, or discover for the first time, the work of the ultimate auteur; a hugely influential and distinctive writer-director who worked in film, theatre and television.

More details about the season and UK-wide releases will be announced towards the end of the year. 

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