Compositions of crisis: Sound and silence in the films of Bergman and Tarkovsky
Abstract
This thesis examines seven films from the cinemas of Ingmar Bergman and Andrei
Tarkovsky—Bergman’s The Seventh Seal (1957), Through a Glass Darkly (1961),
Winter Light (1963), and The Silence (1963), and Tarkovsky’s Stalker (1979),
Nostalghia (1983), and The Sacrifice (1986).
These films were chosen as they represent the deepest periods of two directors’
engagements with the possible death of God and the subsequent loss of intrinsic
existential meaning—topics with which this thesis is principally concerned.
As a starting point, this thesis argues that the films present the silence of God as the
primary indicator of God’s absence from the human world. Becoming aware of this
silence thus causes one to interrogate religious certainties which have hitherto been
taken to be timeless and true. This thesis then contends that, when faced with this
silence and its implications, Bergman desperately sought evidence of God’s existence
while Tarkovsky unyieldingly maintained an attitude of faith.
The directors’ progressions toward these contrasting positions are evident through the
uses of sound elements in their films. As Bergman unsuccessfully pursued evidence of
God’s existence, the soundscapes in his four films become increasingly minimal. The
sparse use of sound reveals Bergman’s conception of a Godless void. On the other hand,
metaphysical silence in Tarkovsky’s films was not perceived as emptiness. Instead,
“silence” in his films was, paradoxically, often depicted through complex layers of
sounds. Presented as manifestations of the metaphysical, the sounds of “silence” in
Tarkovsky’s films consequently become affirmations of faith.
Through this sound-based approach to film analysis, this thesis sets out to explain why
Bergman and Tarkovsky understood metaphysical silence so differently by examining
how they portrayed literal silences.
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