10/10
Mozart Himself Would Be Proud: The Greatest Magic Flute Ever Made
2 March 2005
Warning: Spoilers
This version of The Magic Flute is strictly Bergman's vision, though he manages to put himself in Mozart's very own frame of mind and the experience is supremely powerful as a theater of magic storytelling. Filmed in a Stockholm theater, and sung in Swedish, not in the original German text, it stars Josef Kostlinger as Tamino, Ulrik Cold as Sarastro, Irma Urilla as Pamina, Birgit Nordin as The Queen of the Night and Hakard Hagegard as Papageno. These virtuosic singers, particularly comic baritone Hakan Hagegard and bass Ulrik Cold were once big names in the opera scene in Europe. I can't fully explain the magic of this film. Mozart himself would have been proud had he seen a stage production of this. Everything is exactly as Mozart intended, right down to the smallest detail in scenery and costume. Sarastro is so saintly he resembles God in "Birth of Man", Tamino is handsome in the fairy-tale prince sort of way and the definition of a noble youth on a spiritual quest, Pamina is endearingly feminine and graceful and the Queen of the Night is majestic but pure evil. The Three Boys flying about in the balloons were authentic devises used in the Theater Auf Der Wien in Vienna at the time of Mozart when balloons were newly invented. Both Mozart and his librettist, Emmanuel Schikaneder, were Freemasons and this opera is a tribute to their beliefs, which stressed brotherhood, democracy and enlightenment. This masterpiece is magical and full of fairy tale elements but make no mistake it's an adult allegory on the triumph of brotherhood and the end of tyranny, big issues during the Enlightenment, especially when the French Revolution was about to erupt and the rise of Napoleon's imperialism was about to come to Europe while in America, the war of Indepencence against England was also taking shape.

Bergman makes "The Magic Flute" into a philosophical song play, complete with subtle but powerful symbols. There is a lot of philosophical and holy, nearly Buddhist quotes to emphasize the Freemasons' ideals - basically, don't lie, be full of virtue, be compassionate, be wise, all written out like laws on scrolls that the characters hold up for the viewers to see. The look of the Trial by Fire and Water is effectively poetic, haunting and metaphysical. The finale aptly portrays the triumph of Light or "The Enlightenment" over the dark forces of evil, night and ignorance, in a nearly balletic sort of way when an armed Queen of the Night and her minions advance on Sarastro's Temple, only to overcome in a burst of sunlight by Sarastro and his followers. Even amidst the elevated imagery, there are moments of genuine comedy. Take a look at the Intermission Scene. During their break, the singers indulge in relaxing hobbies- Ulrik Cold (Sarastro) is reading the medieval legend of Parsifal, which is also an opera by Wagner and no doubt an opera Ulrik himself sang, but note how the guy next to him is reading a Donald Duck comic book. Josef Kostlinger and Irma Urilla (Tamino and Pamina) play a game of chess, Birgit Nordin the Queen of the Night smokes a cigarette!! I found it to be very funny to see these characters out of their persona and acting like average joes. In the end, this is a rather "adult", "art-house" and symbolic version of the opera, and you're hard-pressed to find productions that even remotely resemble this one. It's not abstract or post-modern, thank God, and even in its Swedishness it remains true to Mozart's vision of the work. All fans of the opera should treat themselves to this film. First-time opera audiences will enjoy it but not as children that is they should have already seen another opera before this one. Children must first see "The Magic Flute" in various child-oriented productions. As it is, this movie is for adults with acquired tastes in opera and appreciate the Bergamn signature on this.
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