Movie Night with Annie Baker: Fanny and Alexander
Thursday, December 4, 2014
SOLD OUT! Post-film discussion and signing with Annie Baker, Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright of The Flick!
35mm print — theatrical cut
“About five years ago, Baker went to the IFC Center to watch one of her favorite films, Bergman’s FANNY AND ALEXANDER, and noticed something weird going on with the screen. ‘I was like, There’s something wrong, there’s something wrong! I’m not enjoying this; something’s wrong!’ She realized that the movie, originally shot on 35mm film, was being projected digitally. ‘To me, it changed the whole phenomenal experience,’ she says. The Flick draws from the disorientation she felt that day…” – The New Yorker
Several years after Annie Baker watched FANNY AND ALEXANDER projected digitally here at IFC Center, we’re thrilled to welcome her back to present a screening of the theatrical cut of Bergman’s 1982 masterpiece in glorious 35mm. She’ll discuss the film’s impact on her life and work, and sign copies of The Flick, recently released in paperback.
“This late gem from the Swedish maestro upped the ante in terms of autobiographical resonance, radically expanding on the way he’d often used personal experience to inflect the thematic preoccupations of his work, and anticipating scripts like ‘The Best Intentions’ which, despite being directed by others, represented events from his life more literally and explicitly than previously. Here, filtered through the eyes of young Alexander (Bertil Guve) and his sister (Pernilla Allwin), aspects of Bergman’s past are transformed not only into fiction but into a meditation on the nature and craft of fiction: the children’s experiences – first in the warm fold of a theatrical family, then, after dad’s death, at the mercy of a stern stepfather (whose Lutheran calling inevitably evokes that of the director’s own parent) – are structured largely as a series of scenes centred on watching, listening, performing and storytelling.
“As such it’s a marvellously engrossing and thought-provoking film, filled with dazzling dramatic set-pieces and witty, knowing allusions to its creator’s artistic conceits and deceits. Especially when the children are subjected, thanks to their well-meaning but misguided mother (Ewa Fröhling), to the harsh regime of the Bishop Vergerus (Jan Malmsjö), the film also packs an emotional punch, so that the elegant recreation of early-twentieth-century life feels alive in a sense barely dreamt of by most makers of ‘costume drama’.” – Time Out (London)
Part of the series Celluloid Dreams
Annie Baker’s works include The Aliens (Obie Award), Body Awareness, Circle Mirror Transformation (Obie Award), Nocturama, and an adaptation of Anton Chekhov’s Uncle Vanya. Her work has been produced at more than a hundred theaters in the U.S. and in more than a dozen countries. Recent honors include a Guggenheim Fellowship, the Steinberg Playwright Award and a New York Drama Critics Circle Award. She is a resident playwright at Signature Theater.
- Country Sweden
- Language In Swedish with English subtitles
- Year 1982
- Running Time 188 minutes
- Director Ingmar Bergman
IFC Center does not generally provide advisories about subject matter or potentially triggering content in films, as sensitivities vary from person to person. In addition to the synopses, trailers and other links on our website, further information about content and age-appropriateness for specific films can be found on Common Sense Media, IMDb and DoesTheDogDie.com as well as through general internet searches.