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电影《第七封印 Det sjunde inseglet》高清免费在线观看

第七封印 Det sjunde inseglet8.5

导演:英格玛 / 伯格曼

演员:奥克 / 本特 / 古纳尔 / 伦纳特 / 弗里德尔 / 拉松 / 托尔 / 伦纳特 / 拉尔斯 / 波普 / 戈东 / 马克斯 / 尼尔斯 / 贝里 / 莱娜

年份:1957-02-16

地区:瑞典

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情节速览

海滩边,巨浪滔天,英武的骑士布洛克(马克斯•冯•西多 Max von Sydow 饰)与黑衣死神(本特•埃切罗特 Bengt Ekerot 饰)摆下了一盘生死棋局。在下棋的过程中,骑士在回顾自己的人生,所见所闻暗合圣经的图景。十四世纪十字军东征后期,欧洲大陆瘟疫蔓延,民不聊生。布洛克曾遇到过马戏团的一对夫妻,丈夫笃信神明,无比虔诚,妻子则更加现实,唯命是从。他们的相濡以沫让幸福唾手可得。骑士在树林中邂逅了铁匠夫妇。铁匠非常粗鲁,他的妻子很是风骚,他们在树林里对着路人演出双簧,仿佛一对可笑的傀儡。最后,在经历过集体膜拜的祭奠仪式后,武士和他的朋友们再次遇到了死神,曾经的无助与恐惧,愤怒与怀疑,都化作了人生的诘问……
本片获第10届戛纳电影节评委会大奖。

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  • 来自网友【The Bolter】的评论前言:这篇影评中所展现的电影及其“ 为 人 ”是深刻的,带领我们超越某种审美倾向的束缚,更加坦诚得看待关于一部与时代格格不入现代主义电影的事实-它所值得的认真对待,比我们所臆想的王国要沉重得多,它是极罕见的,无可替代的,纵深广阔的缩影。A knight returning from the Crusades finds a rude church still open in the midst of the Black Death, and goes to confession there. Speaking to a hooded figure half-seen through an iron grill, he pours out his heart: "My indifference has shut me out. I live in a world of ghosts, a prisoner of dreams. I want God to put out his hand, show his face, speak to me. I cry out to him in the dark but there is no one there." The hooded figure turns, and is revealed as Death, who has been following the knight on his homeward journey.Images like that have no place in the modern cinema, which is committed to facile psychology and realistic behavior. In many ways, Ingmar Bergman's "The Seventh Seal" (1957) has more in common with the silent film than with the modern films that followed it--including his own. Perhaps that is why it is out of fashion at the moment. Long considered one of the masterpieces of cinema, it is now a little embarrassing to some viewers, with its stark imagery and its uncompromising subject, which is no less than the absence of God.Films are no longer concerned with the silence of God but with the chattering of men. We are uneasy to find Bergman asking existential questions in an age of irony, and Bergman himself, starting with "Persona" (1967), found more subtle ways to ask the same questions. But the directness of "The Seventh Seal" is its strength: This is an uncompromising film, regarding good and evil with the same simplicity and faith as its hero.All of Bergman's mature films, except the comedies, are about his discontent with the ways that God has chosen to reveal himself. But when he made "The Seventh Seal" he was bold enough to approach his subject in a literal manner; to actually show the knight playing chess with Death, an image so perfect it has survived countless parodies. And he had the confidence to end his film, not with a statement or a climax, but with an image. "The strict lord Death bids them dance," says the young actor, directing the attention of his wife to the horizon, against which Death leads his latest victims in a macabre parade.Seeing "The Seventh Seal" again after many years, I was reminded of the richness of detail about Europe in the early Middle Ages, when plague swept the land and the Crusaders returned. The knight (Max von Sydow) shares the story with many other characters, not least his squire (Gunnar Bjornstrand), a realistic, down-to-earth man who has a lively dislike of women, and a sardonic relationship with his master. (He has a silent little snarl to show his discontent.) As the two of them travel home to the knight's castle, the knight is challenged by Death ("I have been at your side for a long time"). He offers Death a bargain: They will play chess for the knight's soul. The game continues during the entire film.Continuing on their way, the knight and squire encounter a troupe of performers, including a couple named Joseph and Mary who have a young child. They visit a seemingly deserted farmstead, where the squire catches a man named Raval trying to steal the bracelet of a plague victim. This Raval is the very theologian who, years earlier, convinced the knight to join the Crusades. The plague has inspired extreme behavior. A group of flagellants files past, some carrying heavy crosses, others whipping themselves, doing penance. The knight and squire encounter a girl (Maud Hansson), held in a cage, who is going to be burned at the stake; her captors explain that she slept with the devil, drawing down the plague. The knight questions the girl about the devil, who should know if God exists. "Look in my eyes," the woman says. "The priest could see him there, and the soldiers--they would not touch me." She is almost proud. "I see nothing but terror," the knight says. Later, as the woman is being prepared for burning, the squire says, "Look into her eyes. She sees nothing but emptiness." "It can't be," says the knight. We are left, almost until the end, with the possibility that although Death exists as a supernatural figure, there is no larger structure in which God plays a part.Some filmmakers are born. Ingmar Bergman was made. Self-made. Born in Uppsala in 1918, he was the son of a Lutheran minister whose strict upbringing included the punishment (recalled in the films) of the small boy being locked in a cupboard "with things that will eat your toes." His first postwar films, not much seen today, are uneasy mixtures of Italian neorealism and Hollywood social drama, and even the titles ("It Rains on Our Love," "Night is My Future") suggest their banality. He was not at ease in the world of small realistic gestures and everyday behavior, and only when he drew back into more serious issues did he begin to find his genius, in films like "To Joy" (1949) and "Sawdust and Tinsel" (1953). "The Seventh Seal" and "Wild Strawberries," both released in 1957, mark his coming of age as an artist. Both are about men near the ends of their lives, on a journey in search of meaning. Bergman's spiritual quest is at the center of the films he made in the middle of his career. "The Seventh Seal" opens that period, in which he asked, again and again, why God seemed absent from the world. In "Through a Glass Darkly" (1962), the mentally ill heroine has a vision of God as a spider. In the austere "Winter Light" (1962), Bjornstrand and von Sydow appear again, in the story of a country priest whose faith is threatened by the imminence of nuclear catastrophe. In "Persona" (1966), televised images of war cause an actress to simply stop speaking. In the masterpiece "Cries and Whispers" (1973), a woman dying of cancer finds a faith that her sisters cannot understand or share.The last three major films in Bergman's career look inside for the answers to his haunting questions. They are all autobiographical, including "Fanny and Alexander" (1984), the last film he directed, and two more he wrote the screenplays for, "The Best Intentions" (1992) and the remarkable "Sunday's Children" (1994). That last film, based on a memory of a summer vacation in the country with a young man and his father, a dying minister, was directed by Bergman's own son, Daniel--perhaps as a way of allowing Daniel to deal with the same kinds of questions Ingmar has had. Bergman's work has an arc. The dissatisfied young man considers social and political issues. In middle age, he asks enormous questions about God and existence. In old age, he turns to his memories for what answers there are. And in many of these films, there is the same kind of scene of reconciliation. In "The Seventh Seal," facing the end of his own life and the general destruction of the plague, the knight spends some time with Joseph and Mary and their child, and says, "I will remember this hour of peace. The dusk, the bowl of wild strawberries, the bowl of milk, Joseph with his lute." Saving this family from Death becomes his last gesture of affirmation. In "Cries and Whispers," a journal left by the dead sister recalls a day when she was feeling a little better, and the sisters and a maid walked in the sunlight and sat in a swing on the lawn: "I feel a great gratitude to my life," she wrote, "which gives me so much."And "Scenes from a Marriage" (1973) tells the story of a couple whose marriage disintegrates, but whose love and hope do not quite disappear; after many years apart, they visit a country house where they were once happy. The woman awakens with a nightmare, the man holds and comforts her, and in the middle of the night in a dark house, surrounded by hurt and fear, this comforting between two people is held up as man's best weapon against despair.
  • 来自网友【Mockingbird】的评论膜拜于《卡拉马佐夫兄弟》中信仰与虚无间绞杀与鏖战的剧烈震荡,如今这种震荡感于《第七封印》中再现了。我们不得不思考这样一种独断的信仰与行为方式:为了彼岸的永恒与欢乐,就不得不忍受此岸的“恐惧与战栗”。这样的信仰之跃太过艰难了,以至于绝大多数人都不得不依靠功利的预期和恐惧的鞭策,才能在名义上皈依,借以自我安慰甚至合理化。实际上,那里没有上帝、也没有魔鬼,死神只是某种必然性的象征,这种必然性指向死亡而最终通往形而上(大对体)的缺位,也就是虚无。而伯格曼的回答是:当终极性的虚无无可避免地降临时,我们要做的是手牵着手去直面、去跟随。意义就在于彼此间的一同携手。电影语言同样饱有意涵,长时间的叠化模糊(打破)了神学划定的此岸与彼岸之界限,死神与修道士是为同一装束,城堡内与死神对峙的暴裂剪接可视为顿悟的一种
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