{"title":"Listening to Ingmar Bergman's Monsters: Horror Music, Mutes, and Acoustical Beings in Persona and Hour of the Wolf","authors":"Alexis Luko","doi":"10.1558/jfm.v6i1.5","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Many of Ingmar Bergman’s films are indebted to the horror genre through topics that explore physical and psychological torture, mutilation, illness, murder, sexual taboos, dream, psychoanalysis, madness, and the supernatural. These emblematic horror tropes are reinforced with close-ups of expressive mouths and eyes and a masterful manipulation of shadow and light, helping to create an aesthetic that is at once intimate and haunting. There is a third plane, an aural one, on which Bergman intertwines music, a rich palette of sound effects, deathly silence, and blood-chilling screams. This paper focuses on the significance of music and the voice (or the lack thereof) in Bergman’s soundtracks and expands ideas put forward by Julia Kristeva about the “abject” and by Michel Chion pertaining to the omniscient and bodiless acousmetres or “acoustical beings” and mutes of film. This article examines mutes and acousmetres in Persona and Hour of the Wolf, and how the quality of their voices or, indeed, their silence, aids them in articulating their identities and manipulating and tyrannizing those around them. Bergman’s characters threaten to destabilize the narrative if and when they find their bodies and/or voices, and thus maintain an ominous power as they straddle diegetic and non-diegetic aural space.","PeriodicalId":201559,"journal":{"name":"Journal of Film Music","volume":"11 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2015-01-12","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"1","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Journal of Film Music","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1558/jfm.v6i1.5","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 1
Abstract
Many of Ingmar Bergman’s films are indebted to the horror genre through topics that explore physical and psychological torture, mutilation, illness, murder, sexual taboos, dream, psychoanalysis, madness, and the supernatural. These emblematic horror tropes are reinforced with close-ups of expressive mouths and eyes and a masterful manipulation of shadow and light, helping to create an aesthetic that is at once intimate and haunting. There is a third plane, an aural one, on which Bergman intertwines music, a rich palette of sound effects, deathly silence, and blood-chilling screams. This paper focuses on the significance of music and the voice (or the lack thereof) in Bergman’s soundtracks and expands ideas put forward by Julia Kristeva about the “abject” and by Michel Chion pertaining to the omniscient and bodiless acousmetres or “acoustical beings” and mutes of film. This article examines mutes and acousmetres in Persona and Hour of the Wolf, and how the quality of their voices or, indeed, their silence, aids them in articulating their identities and manipulating and tyrannizing those around them. Bergman’s characters threaten to destabilize the narrative if and when they find their bodies and/or voices, and thus maintain an ominous power as they straddle diegetic and non-diegetic aural space.
英格玛·伯格曼的许多电影都是通过探索身体和心理上的折磨、残害、疾病、谋杀、性禁忌、梦、精神分析、疯狂和超自然的主题而受到恐怖类型的影响。这些具有象征意义的恐怖比喻被加强了表现力的嘴和眼睛的特写,以及对阴影和光线的熟练操纵,有助于创造一种既亲密又令人难忘的美学。还有第三个层面,听觉层面,在这个层面上,伯格曼将音乐、丰富的音效、死一般的寂静和令人毛骨悚然的尖叫交织在一起。本文着重于伯格曼原声中音乐和声音(或缺乏声音)的意义,并扩展了茱莉亚·克里斯特娃(Julia Kristeva)关于“卑下”(abject)和米歇尔·奇翁(Michel Chion)关于电影中无所不知和无形的声学或“声学生物”(acoustic beings)和无声的观点。本文将分析《Persona》和《Hour of the Wolf》中的静音和声学,以及他们的声音质量,或者说他们的沉默,是如何帮助他们清晰地表达自己的身份,并操纵和压制周围的人。当伯格曼的角色找到自己的身体和/或声音时,他们就会威胁到叙事的不稳定,从而在叙事和非叙事的听觉空间之间保持一种不祥的力量。