On second thought, The Virgin Spring was kind of a one-off for Bergman. (Like you say, a gem.) So maybe I should have compared Tomorrow specifically to The Virgin Spring rather than broadly to Bergman. (Though you can do this stylistically, as you pointed out with the pacing.)
Well, The Seventh Seal was set at about the same time. After these two, though, he was more into contemporary settings. Sure, he did period pieces like Fanny and Alexander and Cries and Whispers, but no more of this way-distant past. Also, he shifted from the existential crises of men -- The Virgin Spring, Wild Strawberies -- to the existential crises of women -- The Silence, Persona, Scenes from a Marriage, Cries and Whispers. His creative arc seems to have paralleled his own involvement with women.
Anyway, treatment and story...one usually thinks, Same story, different treatments: you know, like Gilda and Notorious or Peeping Tom and Psycho or Aguirre, the Wrath of God and Black Robe, or the two Capote biopics that came out on top of each other. But the way I posed them -- different story, same treatment -- that's a toughy.
I guess it's just that while watching Tomorrow I kept thinking about The Virgin Spring, of how the unfairness of a tragedy -- the murder of a cherished daughter, the death of one's new love and claiming away of her offspring -- is met with wrathful retribution or arbitrary justice -- the killing of an innocent boy along with his guilty brothers, the saving of the no-account offspring from a guilty verdict. Then, there are the stark, primitive settings, which are interchangable. You could also see Duvall and Von Sydow in each other's roles.
Same skeleton, different lives.
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