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Ingmar Bergman, the dark arthouse director considered by many fans to have been the greatest film-maker ever, has died at the age of 89.
Bergman died early this morning at his home on the tiny Baltic island of Faaro, near Gotland. No cause of death was immediately given, but his daughter, Eva, said that he had passed away "peacefully".
Bergman made about 60 movies before retiring from film-making in 2003, including The Seventh Seal (1957), Winter Light (1963) and Fanny and Alexander (1982), which won four Oscars, including for Best Foreign Language Film.
In his films, Bergman’s vision was said to encompass all the extremes of his beloved Sweden: the claustrophobic gloom of unending winter nights, the gentle merriment of glowing summer evenings and the bleak magnificence of the island where he spent his last years.
"He was one of the great masters and one of the great humanists of cinema. There are very few people of that kind of stature today. He proved that cinema could be an art form," said Nick James, editor of Sight & Sound, the magazine of the British Film Institute.
Bergman approached difficult subjects such as plague and madness with inventive technique and carefully honed writing, and became one of the towering figures of serious film-making. For many movie buffs, he was the greatest of the authorial film-makers of the 1950s and 1960s, outranking even such figures as Federico Fellini, Luis Bunuel or Jean-Luc Godard.
One of his most devoted fans, the American director Woody Allen, said in a 70th birthday tribute in 1988 that he was "probably the greatest film artist, all things considered, since the invention of the motion picture camera".
Marcus Oscarsson, Times Correspondent in Stockholm, said that the entire country "kind of stopped for a minute". Normal television programming was interrupted and flags were quickly lowered to half-mast on many public buildings around Sweden.
"His pieces are immortal," said Fredrik Reinfeldt, the Prime Minister. "Ingmar Bergman was one of the greatest dramatists in the world – for many he was the absolute greatest."
Bergman first gained international attention with 1955’s Smiles of a Summer Night, a romantic comedy that inspired the Stephen Sondheim musical A Little Night Music - although he had made his first film ten years earlier.
But it was The Seventh Seal, released two years later, that riveted critics and audiences and marked him out as a cinema great. An allegorical tale of the medieval Black Plague years, it contains one of cinema’s most famous scenes - a knight playing chess with the shrouded figure of Death.
"I was terribly scared of death," Bergman said of his state of mind when making the 1957 film, which was nominated for an Academy Award in the best picture category. The film was acclaimed for distilling the essence of Bergman’s work - high seriousness, flashes of unexpected humor and striking images.
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With Kubrick and Fellini he certainly was the greatest filmaker ever.
Barberi Cristian, Roma, Italia
Dallas Texas USA had a fabulous art house that never failed to show Mr Bergman's movies. So glad I lived in a town that valued Mr. Bergman's films.
gail saffell, canyon lake, texas usa
He was a great talent for our world. Its a honour he displayed a lack of faith in God, whom I find useless. He appears to be lost inside and I sincerely hope he finds fulfillment in his next life. God speed, Ingmar.
Gowan, London, UK
He must have died while I was in the middle of watching Persona. We have lost an artist of the first rank.
Denver Green, Oxford,
Ingmar, now you can talk with God and understand his absence. Thanks for your questions and for your silences. Ciao
francesco, pagani, italy
"In his next life" LOL, one might as well wish the same child's fantasy on Richard Dawkins, Albert Einstein or Franz Kafka.
Peter Brawley, McComb, MS USA
Bergman was a great pioneer withing international television elegantly solving the technical problems with a small screen (having face close- ups as noone before him). As for
content inspiring Dallas with his Scenes from a Marriage but above all in making opera great television productions as with his Magic Flute made in a copy of the 18 th century stage at Drottningholm Court Theatre outside Stockholm.
He absolutely loved television which was a not politically correct passion for his compatriots and therefore not one single documentary has been made on the subject.
Let alone he was more loved abroad - particularly in France - than in his own country.
Same fate as Strindberg.
kerstin hallert, paris, france
god is dead
Kev Lax, Shanghai, China
In the long history of film he was simply the greatest. He increased the range of cinematic art and made film do more than anyone else before or since. He was greater even than his fellow-countryman Strindberg because he was more universal. In the 20th century, only a figure like Samuel Beckett can stand comparison with him.
J.Fletcher, Canterbury , UK
He was a great talent for our world. Its a pity he displayed such a lack of faith in God, whom I find nothing but a love and joy even in all kinds of distress. He appears to be lost inside and I sincerely hope he finds fulfillment in his next life. God speed, Ingmar.
Bryan Llanos, Port of Spain, Trinidad