Ingmar Bergman on Martin Scorsese masterpiece Taxi Driver

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  • Опубликовано: 18 сен 2020
  • Ingmar Bergman on Martin Scorsese masterpiece Taxi Driver
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Комментарии • 77

  • @bloodandbricks
    @bloodandbricks 5 месяцев назад +280

    Imagine having Ingmar Bergman not only defend your movie from bad press but praise it using the words "highest artistic level". That may be one of the highest compliments a filmmaker can receieve from an old master.

    • @dkelly26666
      @dkelly26666 3 месяца назад +13

      One can imagine that Scorsese was over the moon about Bergman saying that about his film. Especially so early on in Scorsese's career. Scorsese has adored Bergman plenty over the years, as well. The feeling was mutual.

    • @bloodandbricks
      @bloodandbricks 3 месяца назад +13

      @dkelly26666 There's a video of Orson Welles praising Scorsese for his work on film preservation and David Lean did so also. He also earned the respect of Kurosawa. I dont see how one could top getting praises from Welles, Lean, Bergman, and Kurosawa in the film making world.

    • @louise_rose
      @louise_rose 2 месяца назад +5

      Yes, that was a very sensible answer and a great compliment from him. Bergman was generous about acknowledging good film-making when he saw it, and he could be very clear about admitting his *own* shortcomings (the brllliant 1970 interview book "Bergman on Bergman" is packed with examples of both of these, its an extremely funny, sharp and illuminating book with three insightful and alert film critics grilling the Master about his career and his movies, and Bergman opening up about what he tried for, his experiences on set, where he thinks he failed, his actors and so on). He became more guarded with interviewers as he grew older.

    • @R.Kinney1492
      @R.Kinney1492 Месяц назад

      ​@@bloodandbricks
      Martins Masters. 🎥

  • @maicolc7216
    @maicolc7216 2 месяца назад +70

    He comes across as honest, intelligent and artistic.

    • @nanny287
      @nanny287 Месяц назад +2

      Yes, he was all those things. He was so gifted, with a host of special artistic abilities and talents.

  • @TraitofSiNN727
    @TraitofSiNN727 Месяц назад +26

    3 of my favorite directors that influenced me to go into film school..
    Ingmar Bergman, Martin Scorsese and Orson Welles.

    • @drg538
      @drg538 Месяц назад +1

      3 Masters indeed Sir

  • @abirbhabmaitra7905
    @abirbhabmaitra7905 3 года назад +77

    Absolutely wonderfully described.

  • @23Skeetoo
    @23Skeetoo 4 месяца назад +22

    Absolutely. People are responsible for their own actions; blaming it on a movie is no excuse.

    • @louise_rose
      @louise_rose 2 месяца назад +1

      I didn't realize before that this had even been a discussion topic in the US over the movie, though I know some people have claimed that Jodie Fosters breakthrough role was a bit problematic (her eight years older sister body doubled for her in the most charged scenes)

  • @baruyero
    @baruyero 2 месяца назад +20

    Ingmar Bergman the greatest filmmaker of all times. I will always be grateful for his art.

  • @Elelyoneleven
    @Elelyoneleven 6 месяцев назад +165

    "So Mister Bergman could you please shit on Martin Scorsese for us? That would make a great story for us" Bergman: How about no?

    • @jon8004
      @jon8004 3 месяца назад +5

      She wasn’t encouraging him to answer one way or the other. Don’t presume.

    • @schizvoid8774
      @schizvoid8774 Месяц назад +2

      @@jon8004she was being sneaky about it by starting off mentioning the Reagan assassination attempt she knew what she was looking for.don’t be dumb

    • @jon8004
      @jon8004 Месяц назад +3

      @@schizvoid8774 I've been a reporter for two decades. Sometimes you ask a question the way she did to provoke the subject. If you ask an even-handed question, you get an even-handed (and often less truthful) response. If you ask a question that seems to take a side, or if you adopt the position of someone else and phrase it that way, it can provoke the subject into a more interesting and honest answer. There are different interviewing strategies.

    • @schizvoid8774
      @schizvoid8774 Месяц назад

      @@jon8004 damn you where you were a “reporter” and you still can’t see it?what a shame…

    • @jon8004
      @jon8004 Месяц назад +2

      @@schizvoid8774 Honey, I'm just trying to help you out here. It's a perfectly legitimate question to ask Bergman, no matter your views. We've both wasted to much time on this already.

  • @General_Puffball
    @General_Puffball Год назад +23

    Bobbie Wygant seems to have interviewed just about everyone!

  • @motazgamesmovies3882
    @motazgamesmovies3882 6 месяцев назад +8

    There are people who uses art in the wrong way , well said mr bergman

  • @YouzTube99
    @YouzTube99 10 месяцев назад +4

    Betty published her memoir, 'Talking to the Stars: Bobbie Wygant's Seventy Years in Television' in 2019 and is still with us (in 2023).
    Started her career in 1948 on Dallas-Fort Worth’s Channel 5 when it first went live -- one year before Betty White made her first TV appearance -- and has continued in various roles there ever since. She's a true television pioneer!

  • @dwaynesbadchemicals
    @dwaynesbadchemicals Месяц назад +1

    Such awesome footage.

  • @sarveshb834
    @sarveshb834 3 года назад +21

    Taxi driver in 2 mins!

  • @CannibalWHORE22
    @CannibalWHORE22 2 месяца назад +7

    Bergman was so naturally himself, while many filmmakers in his time were pretentious, he always had a warmth about him and he always spoke truth if he didn’t care for a movie or filmmaker also if he loved the film never held back on his enthusiasm.

    • @louise_rose
      @louise_rose 2 месяца назад +2

      Very true - I think he became more guarded with the media and with journalists in his older years though. By the 1990s he was seen as a somewhat difficult and controlling person to interview, much less open and exuberant than he had used to be. I think the accusations of dodgy accounting and tax evasion that hit him in 1976 and which actually led to him going into professional exile, mostly, for the next five years, and the media circus around that, hit him badly and made him much more suspicious of journalists (he was ultimately cleared of all allegations of tax evasion). After that point, he was less willing to engage in open interviews at ease - though instead he wrote a very outspoken book of memoirs.

  • @billyblim1213
    @billyblim1213 Месяц назад +2

    They should make Taxi Driver 2 but with a better boss battle.

  • @andresgajardo9273
    @andresgajardo9273 Месяц назад +1

    Ingmar ❤❤

  • @johngraves6878
    @johngraves6878 Месяц назад +4

    Well, he didn't say "masterpiece" but he did say "highest artistic level."

  • @eanayac
    @eanayac 3 года назад +12

    Interesting!!

  • @999titu
    @999titu 5 месяцев назад +7

    The greatest director of all times talking about one of the top 5 most greatest directors of all times.
    Ingmar is 1st and Scorsese is one of the top 5.

    • @BobSaint
      @BobSaint 3 месяца назад +6

      Are we really ranking the directors now? Is that how you believe art goes, like some sports chart?

    • @cinemaspace2890
      @cinemaspace2890 2 месяца назад +2

      Scorsese is still not in the top 5. Maybe top 25.

    • @999titu
      @999titu 2 месяца назад

      @@cinemaspace2890 why don't you name your top 10

    • @cinemaspace2890
      @cinemaspace2890 2 месяца назад +2

      @@999titu My top 10 would be my favourite directors, not the best directors, which might not even add Bergman. So it’s pointless. But if you wanna know 10 greater directors objectively than Scorsese then there are many! Well there's obviously Bergman, Charlie Chaplin, Alfred Hitchcock, Sergei Eisenstein, Billy Wilder, Akira Kurosawa, Yasijiro Ozu, Satyajit Ray, Andrei Tarkovosky, Stanley Kubrick. And that's just from top of my head right now. You can find many more directors who are considered greater than Scorsese objectively. But yes, Scorsese is one of the greatest directors too. But not in that high spot.

    • @999titu
      @999titu 2 месяца назад

      @@cinemaspace2890 Hitchcock was a joker

  • @hvegel
    @hvegel 2 месяца назад +3

    I second Mr. Bergman's opinion, but curious if he'd still consider it high art, how violence is so often wielded within Scorsese's later work such as Goodfellas, The Departed, etc

    • @comedyriff5231
      @comedyriff5231 Месяц назад +1

      Yeah, the violence in those movies are more "pornographic", in the sense it´s there to look cool, to please some primitive fascination we humans have with it.

    • @hvegel
      @hvegel Месяц назад

      @@comedyriff5231 i think you nailed it

    • @chrisbirch4150
      @chrisbirch4150 Месяц назад +1

      ​@@comedyriff5231It's hard to say when the stuff is supposed to be non fiction. A head in a vice seems like pornographic violence but if it really did happen maybe it is necessary to shove it in the viewer's face. Pesci's death in Casino was also pretty brutal, but maybe it was of artistic importance to show the brutal consequences of living that life. That being said, I really don't know where you draw the line. The Saw films definitely felt like pornographic violence. Or 'gore porn' as they call it.

  • @carlos9857
    @carlos9857 Месяц назад

    Chapeau!

  • @johnszczerba9979
    @johnszczerba9979 27 дней назад +1

    So the media was doing this even back then? Wtf

  • @timmian85
    @timmian85 Месяц назад +1

    trickle down artistic merit, as scorsese does not like Marvel movies - just imagine how Ingmar would feel about them lol

  • @jhutch9
    @jhutch9 Месяц назад +1

    He sounds like Janosz Poha

  • @drg538
    @drg538 Месяц назад

    Genius commenting upon Genius …wonderful to witness

  • @boxonothing4087
    @boxonothing4087 Месяц назад

    Someone who wants to bad will do so because it's always been their intention, no matter what they watch.
    Widespread violence existed long before movies and video games. For every lunatic going off the rails after watching a violent movie, there's millions of people who don't.
    Some people will harm others no matter what.

    • @dellwright1407
      @dellwright1407 Месяц назад

      Yes and no... the research shows in the UK now for example that social media rap beefs in UK drill music do then go on to exacerbate a lot of real world violence.

  • @JohnDoe-uk6si
    @JohnDoe-uk6si Месяц назад +2

    Taxi driver is a perfect movie no flaws in it

  • @lampad4549
    @lampad4549 3 месяца назад +3

    What is the differences between artistic violence and pornographic violence?

    • @InFramesCinema
      @InFramesCinema 3 месяца назад +10

      I think the difference is that an artistic point of view of violence has a purpose, a meaning. While pornographic violence is violence for violence's sake, it has no end other than that, there is no meaning or purpose, it is banal, empty.

    • @BandrewMacrew
      @BandrewMacrew Месяц назад +2

      @@InFramesCinema Agreed, I think when he says pornographic violence he means perverted violence made to glorify violence or create gore/disgust. Artistic violence would rather be used as a mean to expose a problem, explain a characters actions or reveal something important to the story arc etc

    • @InFramesCinema
      @InFramesCinema Месяц назад +1

      @@BandrewMacrew yeah, I think the same, your comment is even more accurate though.

    • @t.c.eisele5262
      @t.c.eisele5262 Месяц назад +1

      The same difference between a mountain lion killing a lamb and a poacher killing an elephant for its tusks.

    • @marknewbold2583
      @marknewbold2583 Месяц назад +2

      The viewer

  • @JHaras
    @JHaras 3 месяца назад

    As a linguistics student from Sweden, this is interesting from another perspective. The syntax of Swedish really shines through in Bergman’s speech.
    I don’t know whether Bergman was originally schooled in English. It wasn’t the primary foreign language during the time of his upbringing, and surely he was very fluent in German.

    • @Phlandersstudios1
      @Phlandersstudios1 2 месяца назад

      På vilket sätt är det intressant? Kan förstå vad du menar en aning men utveckla gärna

    • @louise_rose
      @louise_rose 2 месяца назад +3

      Yes, his first foreign language at school was German, it was standard in Sweden at the time, and he was fully fluent in it - he actually worked as a director in Munich for several years in the late 1970s and early 1980s, both a film director and stage theatre director. But it's true that his syntax here is coloured by Swedish, you can tell he is thinking in his mother tongue and then translating it bit by bit into English. At 1:00 he's saying "because I think it has nothing with artistic work to do" - this is a Swedish construction, with "nothing --- to do" (inget --- att göra) placed as brackets around the "excluded area" reference - the entire phrase is a translation from Swedish and a native Brit or American most likely wouldn't have said it like that.

    • @ricardocima
      @ricardocima Месяц назад

      @@louise_rose yes, when he was fond of the nazis. ( not blaming him, just found it very curious when I got the info)

  • @iamsheep
    @iamsheep 8 месяцев назад +12

    She thought she could get one great artist to throw another great artist under the bus. Sorry.

    • @Chinaski1
      @Chinaski1 5 месяцев назад

      I mean it could have worked. Bergman was very vocal about directors he disliked. He once said: "I much rather see Goldfinger than an Antonioni film."

    • @ACD1994
      @ACD1994 Месяц назад

      @@Chinaski1 Goldinger is such a fun movie. I don't blame Bergman one bit for that.

  • @neilwiththereeldeel
    @neilwiththereeldeel Год назад +1

    Amazingly, there is a 19th century puritanical nature to Virgin Spring, in which Sydow gets revenge then begs God for forgiveness. On the other hand, one of the most shocking scenes of true violence in Cries & Whispers...I guess Bergman was being more tuned into the bloodier times ✌🏼✌🏼