“Let
me mourn my youth alone.”
I have never had the feeling of being truly in love with
someone. I do not want any sympathy or pity or comments. It is not something I ever
went looking for. I think I am the only one not worried about my love life. My parents
and even some other relatives are always trying to set me up with people. Even my
ninety-eight year old great-grandmother has resorted to asking about my love
life! There are times where I wonder what it would be like to be so deeply in
love with someone and having that person be there for you all the time. I have
had boyfriends before, only two, and they were both almost ten years ago (NOT
AT THE SAME TIME!) but they were big babies and not very fun to be with. I watch
so many romantic films especially from Hollywood’s Golden Age and a lot of my
friends and cousins are engaged or married that I have started to become a
little envious and even find myself wanting a boyfriend. I have NEVER been that
type of person to want a boyfriend, just to put it out there.
As I have gotten older the more romantic/dramatic films I
see that deal with love, especially young love make me wish I had a significant
other. Since I am behind the times with the dating aspect of my life I feel
like I am still in that bracket of young love. Or maybe it is because I refuse
to accept that I am pushing thirty and still consider myself to be younger.
Whatever it is whenever I see young couples in a film it makes me a little sad
that I have not had a romance like that in my life. That could be all the garbage
rom coms and dramas have instilled in me over the years talking though (does anyone
truly realize the impact rom coms and dramas have had over people more
specifically women when it comes to their ideal of love?) One film that made me
feel that way is Ingmar Bergman’s Summer
Interlude.
At an opera house there is a dress rehearsal for the
ballet Swan Lake. The theater is a buzz with nervous energy and excitement for
opening night the following day. A package arrives for the lead dancer Marie. A
reporter named Nystrom says he knows Marie and will take it to her dressing
room but one of the theater workers knows all the tricks the press use to get a
scoop and will not let the young man in. The theater worker brings Marie the
package in her dressing room. She does not look to happy to see the notebook within
the package.
Marie does not come out of her dressing room. Everyone is
talking about how there is something wrong with her. She does wind up coming
down to rehearsals but she still seems on edge. During the rehearsals a light
fuse breaks and everyone has to report back that night after the light is
fixed.
Back in her dressing room sitting in front of her mirror
Marie opens the notebook. It is a diary of a boy she knew years before. She
does downstairs looking for David Nystrom the reporter who was looking for her.
They meet outside. They are seeing each other. David took the night off so they
could be together before the opening of the show. He is upset when he hears
that Marie has to rehearse that night. He leaves in a huff to go off to work.
Marie decides to go on a ferry. On the ferry she sees a priest she has not seen
in years.
The ferry takes Marie to a small island. On the island
Marie sees a woman walking down an empty, dreary road and follows her for a
short time. Marie goes up to a small beach house and sits on the bed. She remembers
back to a few years before. Marie narrates that at the summer she is remember
was a time of happiness, sadness, and disappointment.
Maria did not have a good show and she is in a flurry of
anger. She does not recognize a young man waiting for her after the show. The
next day they meet on a boat and he tells her he likes her and has seen her
show quite a bit. His name is Henrick and they both discover they are going to
the same island for the summer. Sometime later Henrick and Marie see each other
again. There is immediate chemistry between them. He winds up confessing that
he is afraid to die and be alone and she tells him that she is there for him.
That same week Marie’s aunt and uncle come to their house
on the island. Erland and his wife Elizabeth are not really Marie’s aunt and
uncle they are friends of the family. Erland lusts after the beautiful Marie. He
tells her that one day he hopes they can be together. Henrick had been lurking in
the bushes and overhears what Erland tells Marie. When Marie goes to Henrick
later on she sees he is mad at her and when she hears why she starts laughing
at him.
Henrick and Marie become inseparable that summer. They
truly, desperately love each other. Erland notices this and becomes jealous but
that does not bother either Marie or Henrick.
In the present, Marie goes up to Erland’s house. She did
not realize he would be home and is surprised to see him. He asks her about the
package she received. He confesses he had the diary for all those years after
he had taken it out of Henrick’s hospital room. Marie is disgusted with him and
cannot believe she ever let him touch her.
After some more reminiscing, it revealed that three days
before their summer together ended, Marie and Henrick were near the lake
talking about their future. Henrick jumped into the lake. She screams when she
sees he did not land in the water right. He comes out of the lake barely hanging
on for life. At the hospital Henrick dies. Marie feels like her life is over
now that the love of her life is no longer with her. For months after that Marie
walks around as if she were a zombie. Erland tells her that she needs to build
walls around her to make the pain go away and he can help her.
Back in the present, after rehearsal Marie stays in her
dressing room in her costume as if she did not know how to proceed with her
life. The stage manager comes in and tells her that there are times in life
when people see themselves clearly like they never have before and that this is
her moment of clarity. David finally manages to make it to the dressing room.
He sees Marie and the stage manager sitting together and gets a bit jealous. He
is upset that she is not fully committed to their relationship. She tries to
explain that he will never understand what is going on with her. She accidentally
calls him Henrick. At that moment she decides to give David Henrick’s diary so
he can understand her better.
Marie, in a voice over, says that she feels like crying
but she cannot do so and that for the first time in a long time she feels
happy.
Ingmar Bergman made a beautiful film. Through his
direction you feel all the love between Henrick and Marie, you feel Marie’s
anguish and sadness and need for someone to understand her, you feel every
emotion pouring out of the characters, you even feel the sun warming your skin
on the lake. Bergman’s direction puts you right in the film. The most beautiful
scene to me was when Marie walks out of the theater after Henrik dies. Her
facial expression is devastating. Bergman keeps the camera on Marie long enough
for you to feel terrible for her and eventually feel almost uncomfortable as he
lets the camera linger on her face for long. I loved every moment of that scene
because of the direction and all the emotions and heartache you feel. This is one time where I feel that a film being shot in black and white really enhanced the film all around. It made the whole thing more beautiful.
Summer Interlude
was a great film. If there was ever a film that made me truly genuinely envious
of never experiencing young love or just the feeling of being loved by another
person it is Summer Interlude. The
film is absolutely worth seeing. It is one of very few films I can say is complete
perfection.
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