Person wrote:BBC 2's Arena showed a documentary on Bergman called, Encountering Bergman at 23:20 tonight in the UK. I missed it. Did anyone see it?
It was a pretty decent introduction to the man and his films based around interviews with three people who themselves interviewed Bergman - Melvyn Bragg (who interviewed Bergman in the 70s as part of his first South Bank Show season), Olivier Assayas and Marie Nyreröd.
Bragg and Assayas start by commenting on Summer With Monika (apparently it was the first subtitled film that Bragg saw and inspired him to follow the rest of Bergman's career). There are clips from that film, The Seventh Seal (the chess game), Winter Light, The Silence (the mother covering her son in her perfume before they go to bed), Persona, Wild Strawberries, Cries And Whispers, Smiles Of A Summer Night and Scenes From A Marriage (which also includes a picture of the cover of British television listings magazine Radio Times from the 70s, when it was apparently a big deal - I couldn't imagine a subtitled Swedish mini-series getting the front cover these days!)
There is documentary footage from the making of Fanny and Alexander documentary (the section where Bergman is directing the boy in the first scene and the funny part where he is showing the logistics of how the dance around the apartment is interrupted by the couple breaking away for a moment to arrange a clandestine meeting, with the husband ending up in line next to his wife!), and some footage from behind the scenes of Persona and Saraband. Also some nice, if brief, footage from a BBC report from the set of The Virgin Spring in 1959 which I had never seen before, though the film is never mentioned by name.
The programme ends with Marie Nyreröd talking about Bergman's love of music in his retirement and makes a nice connection back to To Joy.
Since the documentary was created before Bergman's death it was a little disconcerting to hear them say at the end of the documentary that "Bergman has now retired definitively". No kidding!
So nothing that we wouldn't have known already from watching the DVDs of Bergman's films, and there was no mention of any of the early films other than To Joy, nor Through A Glass Darkly, The Magician, Face To Face, the comedies, Autumn Sonata, any of the sixties films after Persona, any of the later films apart from Fanny and Alexander, or any of the films he wrote for others to direct after his official retirement from filmmaking.
However it was a much better tribute than the Paxman travesty was, and as the main purpose of the documentary was to provide the reminiscences of the three people who had the opportunity to interview him rather than to be pressed into service to act as a eulogy I can forgive the programme itself for not being comprehensive.