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Art & Creativity Quote by Ingmar Bergman

"I write scripts to serve as skeletons awaiting the flesh and sinew of images"

About this Quote

Bergman demotes the screenplay from sacred text to anatomical draft, and in doing so he quietly rebukes the literary prestige that cinema has always half-envied. Calling scripts "skeletons" is a director's flex: structure matters, but only as a framework for what film uniquely does - faces, light, timing, silence, the charged distance between two bodies in a frame. The real organism arrives later, when images give the story its nervous system.

The subtext is craft politics. Writers often want the script to be the movie; Bergman insists the movie is the movie. A skeleton can be elegant, even complete on its own terms, yet it cannot breathe. He positions himself not as an illustrator of pages but as the surgeon who assembles meaning in the cutting room and on set, where performance and composition can contradict, complicate, or flat-out overturn the written intention.

Context sharpens the point: Bergman came out of theater, where text and actor reign, yet his films are remembered for visual psychology - the close-up as interrogation, the face as landscape, the room as moral weather. In a career obsessed with interior life, it's telling that he frames the script as spare bones. He isn't dismissing writing; he's insisting on humility before the medium. Cinema, for Bergman, is not a novel you can see. It's an image you can feel thinking.

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TopicMovie
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I write scripts to serve as skeletons awaiting the flesh and sinew of images
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Ingmar Bergman

Ingmar Bergman (July 14, 1918 - June 30, 2007) was a Director from Sweden.

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