CinemaSerf
7
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Aug 10, 2025
Now of course everyone’s favourite Max von Sydow film is “Flash Gordon” (1980) but I reckon this performance for Ingmar Bergman might be almost as good! With the dreaded Black Death sweeping his homeland, “Block” (MvS) returns from the Crusades with his squire “Jöns” (Gunnar Björnstrand) only to find himself barely off the boat before he encounters the apparently quite reasonable grim reaper himself. “Block” invites him (Bengt Ekerot) to play a game of chess, on condition that he is left to live for the duration of the game and that if he wins, then he is to be allowed to go free. The game isn’t played as one continuous effort, though, and that allows the knight to travel the land experiencing just how the toxic combinations of the sickness and the religious wars have impacted on a population rife with poverty, fear and superstition. Indeed, as the pair attempt to get to their homes, “Block” begins to doubt his own hitherto unshakeable faith in God. There might be a semblance of salvation on the horizon for him, though, when they encounter a group of travelling actors whom he agrees to act as bodyguard for through the perilous forest en route to his castle. It’s his association with “Mia” (Bibi Andersson) and husband “Jof” (Nils Poppe) that might just give him the ammunition to defeat his constant companion - assuming, after all of this, that he actually wants to. The photography and scenario are bleak and effective whilst the questions and scepticism about many things religious as well as the conflict experienced by this honourable man are also really quite poignantly expressed by an actor whose measured and considered performance is powerful. It’s a potent look at the positives and negatives of faith and of the dangers to that faith when it is rationally questioned by a man faced with it’s unfairness and inconsistencies. It packs a lot onto ninety minutes, asks some fairly fundamental questions and still looks great in monochrome on a big screen.