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Sunday, May 26, 1996
Port of Call
The young and restless Bergman tries yet another filmic tradition here with this human story in the neorealist mode: "I still had nothing of my own to offer?.I just grabbed helplessly at any form that might save me." The result is a naturalistic city film, in which one finds the closest thing to overt social critique in Bergman's entire oeuvre. Here the issues facing the young working-class girl Berit are a grotesquely hypocritical mother, a troubled past, difficulties building a futre with her present lover, and a friend who dies after a back-alley abortion. Especially noteworthy in comparison with the other early Bergman films is the fact that the main characters choose a narrative resolution in real life instead of in some extra-social, extra-narrative space. The cinematographer who helped capture the grittiness of the waterfront milieu here is newcomer Gunnar Fischer, who became Bergman's main photographer throughout the 1950s.-Mark Sandberg
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