Monday, October 15, 2018

Arrow Video Tabs Dec. 4 For The Blu-ray Release Of Director Ingmar Bergman's The Serpent's Egg


DVD & Blu-ray Release Report, Ralph Tribbey
In 1976, Sweden’s iconic filmmaking legend, Ingmar Bergman, fled his native land.   He was being hounded by government officials over the issue of tax evasion, which was later withdrawn as being without merit … but the damage to his reputation and the humiliation that followed had been done.

He had been working on a script in various forms since 1966, which was based on his pre-war experiences with a pro-Nazi family in Germany … he lived with them as an exchanged student.   Now, back in Germany, he decided to finish the script … it would become his first film produced outside of Sweden in his filmmaking career.

Arrow Video, with domestic sales and distribution expertise provided by MVD Entertainment Group, has tabbed Dec. 4 as the Blu-ray street date for a special edition of that film … The Serpent’s Egg.

The film, which stars David Carradine and Liv Ullmann, takes place in the early 1920s in Germany.   Carradine plays Abel Rosenberg, an American living in post World War I Germany, as a trapeze artist who has been let-go from the circus.   His brother Max was his partner and has recently committed suicide …his reasons will become clear as the film progresses.

DVD & Blu-ray Release Report, Ralph TribbeyMax’s ex-wife is a cabaret performer by the name of Manuela (Ullmann), who is not particularly shocked when Abel tells her of Max’s death (how odd).   Also in the mix is a sinister fellow by the name of Hans Vergerus (Heinz Bennent), who is something of a childhood friend of Abel’s … perhaps pre-war.

There is also Police Inspector Bauer (played by Gert Fröbe) who takes more than an interest in Abel, especially when several individuals loosely connected to Abel, Max and Manuela turn up dead.  

Bergman’s The Serpent’s Egg takes us down a Kafkaesque rabbit hole that foreshadows the rise of Hitler’s Nazi Germany.   The film also, in a not so subtle way, is Bergman’s way of hitting back at the “power of the state” and the control it has over the helpless individual, which is something of a metaphor for his own experiences with his native Sweden.

Bonus features include commentary from David Carradine, the archival featurette titled “Away From Home” and the newly prepared video session titled “Bergman’s Egg” featuring critic and author Barry Forshaw (“Death in a Cold Climate: Scandinavian Crime Fiction,” “Nordic Noir” “Sex and Film,” etc.).

DVD & Blu-ray Release Report, Ralph Tribbey





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