The Third of Michael Emerson's Five Creepiest Characters of All Time: Johan Borg in Hour of the Wolf
Published July 21, 2008
As a filmmaker, Ingmar Bergman dealt with his personal anxieties and demons by turning them into movies. So Hour of the Wolf is not merely a brooding meditation on the theme of madness. It is actually a very personal film. Von Sydow is largely standing in for Bergman, who had himself suffered (and been hospitalized for) a significant mental breakdown only couple of years earlier. While Bergman grappled with the darkness, Von Sydow (a frequent Bergman actor) had been playing Jesus in The Greatest Story Ever Told, one of the last all-star biblical epics.
Okay, so now I'll 'fess up before I bore you with an endless stream of Bergman and Von Sydow trivia. I "found" Bergman during the requisite "post mortem" viewing of what I assumed would be a medicinal dose of just one or two of the director's films. I'd been avoiding his work my entire adult life because of the whole "tortured Swedish artist" thing that Emerson mentions. But with his death, I decided it was time to see at least one Bergman film.
And so I saw The Seventh Seal. And then I watched Virgin Spring. And then I watched Wild Strawberries... and Persona... and Through a Glass Darkly... and Winter Light... and The Silence... and Shame... and Hour of the Wolf. I just couldn't get enough. Bergman was nothing like what I expected. Yes, he was full-on art house and full-on tortured, but man was he compelling!
For me, finding Bergman was actually refreshing. Here was somebody making well-crafted movies that asked the big questions, and asked them honestly — not as a chance to pontificate but as an opportunity to explore. It was exciting to see films this courageous and probing—a cinema of ideas. And oddly, Bergman's exploration of the darkness was not nihilistic, but often strangely hopeful.
But there's not much hopefulness in Hour of the Wolf. The darkness of the title (the hour between night and dawn) permeates the fabric of the film. Von Sydow delivers a magnificently tormented performance as the doomed artist, and Liv Ullmann is spectacular in her part of the grief-stricken wife. You could say that this is a "creepy" favorite of mine. And I'm delighted to find that it's also a favorite of Michael Emerson's.
Oh, and congratulations, Mr. Emerson, on your well-deserved Emmy nomination!
- The Third of Michael Emerson's Five Creepiest Characters of All Time: Johan Borg in Hour of the Wolf
- Published: July 21, 2008
- Type: Opinion
- Section: Video
- Filed Under: Video: Art House, Video: Horror
- Writer: Cindy Collins Smith
- Cindy Collins Smith's BC Writer page
- Cindy Collins Smith's personal site
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