The Seventh Seal: Difference between revisions

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* [[Affably Evil]]: Death. He seems to genuinely enjoy his conversations with Block.
* [[Affably Evil]]: Death. He seems to genuinely enjoy his conversations with Block.
* [[Anachronism Stew]]: Block's chainmail armour suggests a date no later than the 13th century, before the days of widespread [[Burn the Witch|witch burning]] and before the [[wikipedia:Danse Macabre|Danse Macabre]] became a popular artistic motif (both of these only took off in the 15th century). [[wikipedia:Flagellant|Flagellantism]] never really came to Sweden.
* [[Anachronism Stew]]: Block's chainmail armor suggests a date no later than the 13th century, before the days of widespread [[Burn the Witch|witch burning]] and before the [[wikipedia:Danse Macabre|Danse Macabre]] became a popular artistic motif (both of these only took off in the 15th century). [[wikipedia:Flagellant|Flagellantism]] never really came to Sweden.
** It's sometimes thought that the references to the plague are also anachronistic, as the disease supposedly didn't arrive in Europe until 1348. [[History Marches On|Modern medical historians]] believe, however, that plague has always existed in Europe as a low-level simmering endemic disease which flares into epidemic status when a new strain of the bacteria arrives from Asia. The earliest plague epidemic known to history was in 541 CE, but that was unlikely to have been the first.
** It's sometimes thought that the references to the plague are also anachronistic, as the disease supposedly didn't arrive in Europe until 1348. [[History Marches On|Modern medical historians]] believe, however, that plague has always existed in Europe as a low-level simmering endemic disease which flares into epidemic status when a new strain of the bacteria arrives from Asia. The earliest plague epidemic known to history was in 541 CE, but that was unlikely to have been the first.
* [[The Anti-Nihilist]]: Laps over with [[Desperately Looking for a Purpose In Life]], in Block's case.
* [[The Anti-Nihilist]]: Laps over with [[Desperately Looking for a Purpose In Life]], in Block's case.
* [[Anyone Can Die]]
* [[Anyone Can Die]]
* [[Bittersweet Ending]]: {{spoiler|The majority of the established characters meet their appointment with Death}}, but Jof, Mia and Mikael walk into the sunset, alive.
* [[Bittersweet Ending]]: {{spoiler|The majority of the established characters meet their appointment with Death}}, but Jof, Mia and Mikael walk into the sunset, alive.
* [[Black and Gray Morality]]: The knight and his squire are [[Sliding Scale of Anti-Heroes|anti-heroes of differing flavours]]. Most of the people they meet are thieves, murderers, religious zealots or [[Arson, Murder, and Jaywalking|complete idiots,]] and [[The Grim Reaper|Death]] is a largely impersonal entity patiently stalking them at every turn. The only ones who are neither black or grey are [[Happily Married|Jof, Mia]] and their [[Babies Make Everything Better|son]] [[Children Are Innocent|Mikael.]]
* [[Black and Gray Morality]]: The knight and his squire are [[Sliding Scale of Anti-Heroes|anti-heroes of differing flavors]]. Most of the people they meet are thieves, murderers, religious zealots or [[Arson, Murder, and Jaywalking|complete idiots,]] and [[The Grim Reaper|Death]] is a largely impersonal entity patiently stalking them at every turn. The only ones who are neither black or grey are [[Happily Married|Jof, Mia]] and their [[Babies Make Everything Better|son]] [[Children Are Innocent|Mikael.]]
* [[Black Comedy]]: Believe it or not, but this movie does have more than its fair share of laughs, for a little levity. Courtesy of [[Deadpan Snarker|Jöns]].
* [[Black Comedy]]: Believe it or not, but this movie does have more than its fair share of laughs, for a little levity. Courtesy of [[Deadpan Snarker|Jöns]].
* [[The Black Death]]
* [[The Black Death]]
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{{quote| ''Block'': "Must you keep singing?"<br />
{{quote| ''Block'': "Must you keep singing?"<br />
''Jöns'': *Smug grin* [[Funny Moments (Sugar Wiki)|"Yes."]] }}
''Jöns'': *Smug grin* [[Funny Moments (Sugar Wiki)|"Yes."]] }}
* [[Signs of the End Times]]: Jöns has heard stories about bad omens such as horses eating eachother and [[Alien Sky|four suns in the sky]]. Another character tells about a woman giving birth to a calf's head.
* [[Signs of the End Times]]: Jöns has heard stories about bad omens such as horses eating each other and [[Alien Sky|four suns in the sky]]. Another character tells about a woman giving birth to a calf's head.
* [[Sliding Scale of Anti-Heroes]]: Block is a solid Type II. At his core, he's a good man, if [[Knight in Sour Armor|a broken one]]. Jöns (Type VI, maybe a V), on the other hand, [[Monster Misogyny|freely admits to having raped women until "it got boring."]] While he does save Jof the actor during the tavern scene, he's certainly not a nice man. If anything, this serves to contrast between the two. Block aims to [[The Anti-Nihilist|rise above the nihilism]] that surrounds him, while [[Nietzsche Wannabe|Jöns seems to embrace it and rolls with it]].
* [[Sliding Scale of Anti-Heroes]]: Block is a solid Type II. At his core, he's a good man, if [[Knight in Sour Armor|a broken one]]. Jöns (Type VI, maybe a V), on the other hand, [[Monster Misogyny|freely admits to having raped women until "it got boring."]] While he does save Jof the actor during the tavern scene, he's certainly not a nice man. If anything, this serves to contrast between the two. Block aims to [[The Anti-Nihilist|rise above the nihilism]] that surrounds him, while [[Nietzsche Wannabe|Jöns seems to embrace it and rolls with it]].
* [[Tempting Fate]]: Jonas vocally expresses pride over his last performance; that of playing dead to get away from a jealous husband. When he then mentions he's free and all he'll have to do is hide from anything that might kill him for the next little while, Death appears immediately behind him. [[Funny Moments (Sugar Wiki)|Cue a fairly comical exchange where Death takes his time in sawing a tree and chats with a panicked, weaseling Jonas.]]
* [[Tempting Fate]]: Jonas vocally expresses pride over his last performance; that of playing dead to get away from a jealous husband. When he then mentions he's free and all he'll have to do is hide from anything that might kill him for the next little while, Death appears immediately behind him. [[Funny Moments (Sugar Wiki)|Cue a fairly comical exchange where Death takes his time in sawing a tree and chats with a panicked, weaseling Jonas.]]

Revision as of 21:27, 29 June 2014

 Jöns: "Who will take care of that child? Is it the angels or God or Satan... Or just emptiness? Emptiness, Sire..."

Block: "It can't be so!"

The Seventh Seal (Det sjunde inseglet) is a classic film from Swedish director Ingmar Bergman. The film is highly symbolic and explores many philosophical and existential concepts, including death and the meaning of life.

It has moved beyond the realm of the classic, to the point that it is often used as a punchline about stuck-up film majors, critics, and film studies teachers. However, it was never intended to be high art, and is rather straightforward, humorous and melodramatic despite its dark theme.

When Antonius Block, a disillusioned crusader and his squire Jöns return from the Holy Land, they find little solace. Even far from the battlefields, Death still stalks him patiently.

When Death arrives, Block challenges him to a game of chess, to which Death agrees. If Block wins, he goes free, but Death's Anthropomorphic Personification seems undaunted. He is the Trope Namers of Chess with Death, after all.

Block and Jöns travel through a Crapsack World of cults, the black plague, and ravaged countryside, with Death on their tail all the while. Jöns saves a mute girl from a Fate Worse Than Death at the hands of a roving bandit. She cowers from him, expecting the same, and he sets himself somewhere between Magnificent Bastard and Complete Monster by sighing that the Crusades have made him tired of rape.

She accompanies Jöns as a servant and soon they find themselves at a church, where Block goes to the Confessional. Unfortunately, Death is standing in for the priest, and Block inadvertently reveals his chess strategy. Block discovers the trick and vows that he will still beat Death, though he is clearly shaken.

Block, Jöns, and the mute girl meet up with a family of traveling actors, in a rare moment of beauty, peace, and simple joy. Bloch invites them to accompany him as he returns to his castle, where they may all be safe from the encroaching plague.

They arrive at a small town where a mob is burning a witch. Jöns idly considers killing them for their ignorance, but in the end decides it would make no difference. He then embarks on a diatribe over The Nothing After Death, explaining the film's Leitmotif, just in case we failed to put it together ourselves.

However, Block is unwilling to let Jöns strip away his hopes. Despite this, Block loses his match with Death, but is granted one final reprieve so that he may return to his wife for a last meal.

Death arrives and Block tries again to beg him off to no avail. The family of actors sees Death leading the others off in a disturbing Danse Macabre, but Block's kindness to them has spared them from the plague.

Tropes used in The Seventh Seal include:


 Block: "Must you keep singing?"

Jöns: *Smug grin* "Yes."

 Jonas: No. My performance!

Death: Cancelled... because of Death.

  • The Voiceless: Jöns' mute girl. Says one line when Death comes to take them all away: "It is finished."
  • Wangst: In-universe example. The village smith is trying to drown his sorrows after the actor and director from Jof and Mia's troupe runs away with his wife. Jöns takes great pleasure in ridiculing him for it.
  • Warrior Poet: Antonius Block. His squire Jöns arguably more so.