Ingmar Bergman’s 1957 movie, The
Seventh Seal, is a striking film that boldly brings some of life’s most basic
question to center stage. Throughout the film, opposing details are at
work to demonstrate the conflicting possibilities of reality. The juxtaposition
of light and dark, black and white, sinister and comedic, holy and evil, joy
and agony, and, most notably life and death, are major elements in the films
development. The main character, Antonius Block, a knight who has return from
10 years of crusading, is tortured by his uncertainty about the divine powers and
is plagued with the looming possibilities of an empty eternity. When death
comes for him, he postpones his ultimate destiny by challenging death to a
chess match. Meanwhile Antonius looks for answers to the torturing questions of
life. His search for a black and white answer is reflected throughout the film
with numerous images that illustrate this conflict.
In the opening images of the movie,
contrast is introduced to the audience overtly. The opening shot captures only
a shot of white clouds in the sky. With a fade, the audience is introduced to
the strong image of a single black bird hovering up above. The black silhouette
of the bird against the white clouds immediately introduces the struggle between
white and black that will continue throughout the film.
Antonius’s conflict is also
introduced early with revealing images that combining light and dark. The first
close up we see of the conflicted protagonist on the beach, is marked by a
contrast created with lighting. He kneels on the beech looking up to the
heavens. While once side of his face is brightly lit, the other is plagued by a
dark shadow. This further illustrates the struggle between the belief in God
and the suspicion of his absence, which Antonius Block later accidently
articulates to Death.
The
opposition of black and white is even noted verbally when death and Block begin
their game of Chess. Death chances to use the black pieces and notes “Black is
becoming for me.” The black at white chess pieces in a sense become a
representation of life and death. As long as Antonius Block’s white pieces
prevail, so does life. Should the black pieces defeated the white pieces, death
will have his way.
Because the film is in black and
white, the lights and darks of the film become central to the theme of the
story. Black and white are in constant opposition to each other; one
representing life and light and the other representing death and darkness. The
examples of the opposition are nearly endless. Ingmar Bergman recognized the power of
opposites and utilized the light and dark symbols to articulate Antonius
Block’s struggle with the truth and destiny.