Persona

1966 · Directed by Ingmar Bergman · 85 min · Sweden

One woman stops speaking; another talks until identity starts to split.

Edited by Monocurator · Filed July 17, 2026

Persona 1966
Details
Ease
Best saved for later Good first watch: Best saved for later
Genre
Drama

The guide

Persona treats a simple arrangement—a nurse caring for an actor who has stopped speaking—as material that cinema itself can no longer hold securely. Ingmar Bergman and cinematographer Sven Nykvist move between stark faces, soft coastal light, ruptured images, and moments that expose the film as a fragile object. Bibi Andersson’s flow of speech meets Liv Ullmann’s silence, and the balance of attention between them keeps changing. The film is influential not because it hides one correct solution, but because its form makes identity, performance, trust, and representation feel unstable at the same time.

How to ease in

Do not approach Persona as a mystery with a final factual explanation. Start with the practical situation between Alma and Elisabet, then notice when the film makes that situation harder to trust. Images in the prologue and later visual ruptures work through association rather than conventional plot. It is fine to leave with competing interpretations; the tension between them is part of the experience.

Heads-up

A quick, non-exhaustive note Includes psychological distress, emotional manipulation, an explicit sexual account, abortion discussion, threatened violence, blood, disturbing war imagery, and an image of self-immolation.

Where to go next

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Momo's Note Who is Momo? →

One woman stops speaking; another talks until identity starts to split.

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Silence looks passive until the film shows how much power it can collect. Alma keeps offering language, memory, and confidence into a space that does not answer. I find the film most unsettling when listening begins to feel less like care and more like possession.

— Momo