ComingSoon.net is counting down our ten favorite films starring Ingrid Bergman, an actress who has had many terrific roles over her six-decade career. Check out our choices in the gallery below!
A Swedish actress who reigned supreme throughout the Golden Age of Hollywood and beyond, Ingrid Bergman managed to score leading roles in all kinds of unimpeachable classics. With countless Academy Awards, Emmys, Golden Globes and even a Tony, Bergman is nothing short of a superstar. She’s an icon, a bona fide hitmaker, a household name even after all these decades.
If they’re a notable filmmaker from the middle of the 20th century, you can be sure they worked with Ingrid Bergman in some capacity or another. Roberto Rossellini, Alfred Hitchcock , Ingmar Bergman (no relation), George Cukor —Bergman made her way into each of these filmmakers’ works, leaving a lasting impression that remains even to this day. Looking back on some of her best work, it’s clear to see that Ingrid Bergman’s filmography is one for the ages.
Ingrid Bergman movies
Casablanca (1942)
Undoubtedly Ingrid Bergman’s magnum opus, Casablanca sees the actress alongside Humphrey Bogart as a former couple that reunites at a club in Morocco in the midst of World War II. It’s romantic, it’s dramatic, it’s thrilling, it’s one of the greatest films ever made and the best showcase for Bergman’s immense talent.
Autumn Sonata (1978)
As noted above, Swedish director Ingmar Bergman has no relation to actress Ingrid Bergman. Still, that doesn’t mean that the two didn’t collaborate throughout their equally important careers—Autumn Sonata is the only instance of this, released in 1978 toward the end of the latter’s career. Naturally, the movie is as great as the two’s careers would suggest.
Notorious (1946)
A lesser-known effort from Alfred Hitchcock, but one that is largely regarded as one of his best, 1946’s Notorious (stylized as Notorious! ) puts Bergman alongside Cary Grant as the two play characters who get wrapped up in an international spy conspiracy involving the Nazis. Bergman never allowed herself to just be the female lead—she was always dynamic, always engrossing.
Journey to Italy (1954)
The story of a European couple who find their marriage tarnished by a seemingly innocent trip to Italy, this Rossellini film only solidified Bergman’s status as a pillar of the Golden Age. It was an incredibly influential film in its own right, due in large part to Bergman’s performance.
Gaslight (1944)
George Cukor is undoubtedly one of the most prolific filmmakers to ever live. From the Philadelphia Story to My Fair Lady to one of the original A Star is Born s, Cukor never stopped churning out hits as a director—Gaslight is no exception, a drama starring Bergman that is responsible for coining the term “gaslighting.”
Stromboli (1950)
Another one from Rossellini and Bergman (the first collaboration of many), Stromboli juxtaposes a woman’s spiral into an existential crisis following World War II with the beautiful scenery found on the volcanic island of Stromboli. Bergman and Rossellini are all-star collaborators, clearly.
Europa '51 (1952)
The collaborations between the two were almost never not enthralling, clearly. Europa ’51 puts Rossellini and Bergman back together again, with Bergman playing a mother declared insane after the suicide of her son. It’s certainly a heavy film, but one that showcases Bergman’s talent to the fullest.
Spellbound (1945)
A collaboration with Hitchcock that arrived the year before Notorious , Spellbound is a film about the new director of an asylum who turns out to be far from what he initially presented himself to be. Bergman costars with Gregory Peck, earning herself the leading role in Hitchcock’s next film too.
Cactus Flower (1969)
The story of a dentist who tells his girlfriend he’s already married in order to keep her from pushing the idea on him… only for her to ask to meet the wife, Cactus Flower serves as the inspiration for the 2011 Adam Sandler film Just Go With It . Needless to say, Bergman does a better job here than Jennifer Aniston ever could.
Murder on the Orient Express (1974)
One of many adaptations of Agatha Christie’s classic novel, 1974’s Murder on the Orient Express is an all-star line-up of characters: Albert Finney, Lauren Bacall, Sean Connery, Vanessa Redgrave, and, of course, Ingrid Bergman all get time to shine here. It might not be Old Hollywood, but it’s a worthy entry in the actress’s filmography.