ABSTRACT By exploring the critical, journalistic and popular reception of Ingmar Bergman’s films in Australia in the late 1950s and ’60s, as well as tracing their patterns of exhibition and… Click to show full abstract
ABSTRACT By exploring the critical, journalistic and popular reception of Ingmar Bergman’s films in Australia in the late 1950s and ’60s, as well as tracing their patterns of exhibition and distribution, this essay examines how particular discourses and approaches to Bergman were already well and truly in place by the early ’60s and prior to the arrival of most of the director’s films in the country. The critical response to and release of Bergman’s work in Australia does reveal minor antipodean variations and is an important staging ground for an emerging and quickly evolving screen culture, as well as debates around film as “art”. But it is also highly referential and reverential to received opinion from overseas and evidences the truly global reach of Bergman’s cinema and reputation during this period. This essay will examine the appearance of a range of Bergman films in Australia starting with Smiles of a Summer Night in 1957 and concluding with the controversial release of the heavily censored The Silence in 1965, fashioning evidence for a boom in “Bergmania” that reaches a peak in 1961–62 and provides an important test case for the rise of “foreign” film distribution in Australia.
               
Click one of the above tabs to view related content.