The scripts of award-winning film director Ingmar Bergman have been
among the most important documents in film history. Though his vision in
such films as Wild Strawberries and The Seventh Seal has shaped our
thinking about the cinema, none of his most recent films have been shown
in U.S. theaters. This book brings to English readers for the first time
some of the finest creations of Bergman's mature years. In these three
scenarios of extraordinary frankness, even rawness, Bergman shows his
tender yet realistic views on the world of theater, cinema, and acting,
culminating with In the Presence of a Clown, where he returns to the
character of his Uncle Carl, an irrepressible inventor who comes up with
an early version of the talking film. These most recent scripts, in
effect Bergman's own fifth act, add an important and moving chapter to
his life work. A preface contextualizing the scripts within Bergman's
oeuvre has been added by Lasse Bergstrom, a noted Swedish film critic as
well as the publisher of Bergman's work in Sweden.