Summer Interlude

1951 [SWEDISH]

Action / Drama / Romance

Plot summary


Uploaded by: FREEMAN

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802.4 MB
988*720
Swedish 2.0
NR
23.976 fps
1 hr 36 min
P/S ...
1.52 GB
1472*1072
Swedish 2.0
NR
23.976 fps
1 hr 36 min
P/S ...

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by lasttimeisaw7 / 10

Summer Interlude

This Ingmar Bergman's earlier essay is a dedicative recount of a young ballerina's summer holiday puppy romance with a timid college student which culminated in a tragic accident and the narrative leaps between the reminiscent past and the present (13 years later, when she is preparing her SWAN LAKE premier).

The film is slightly differentiated from Bergman's usual philosophy-heavy, mentally- straining members of his reservoir, a summer vacation in a Scandinavian island, with youth in bathing suits, is a curio to find out. But the die-hard Bergman fans will as always revel in the solemn nuances and formidable expressions from Maj-Britt Nilsson's heroine, whose god-spitting manifesto "I'll hate him till the day I die!"defies any compromise and detour, which could also be Bergman's mouthpiece speaking.

There are many aesthetically haunting shots with utterly perfect structural deployment (which cannot be a surprise since this is the sixth Bergman's film I have watched so far),a witchcraft of radiating the characters' frank and inherent emotion and sixth senses through Black & White lens, the portrait close-ups, the little cartoon on the letter, even the ballet tableaux, all sparkle with resilience of a human soul's elusive fickleness. The wild strawberry, chess playing with the clergyman and the hag with mustache, there are many anecdotes here just for perusing.

Ms. Nilsson captures all the spotlight in the film, although she and Birger Malmsten are quite awkward in pulling off mid-or-late teens in love since wrinkles and creases cannot lie, but it is almost a mission-impossible for any actress since spanning 13 years especially from teenage to adulthood is a great challenge, nevertheless, this blemish can not overthrow the film's majestic study on a psychological case of a lost love soul's selective protection and rejuvenation, although may not be Bergman's best, still a recommendable film from the maestro and furthermore attests his consistency in filmic supremacy.

Reviewed by MartinHafer7 / 10

One of the prettiest and most artistic black & white films I have seen.

"Summer Interlude" is an exquisitely filmed movie. While it is in black & white, the cinematography and way the shots are framed is just striking and make the film well worth seeing. As for the movie itself, it's pretty much what most would expect from an Ingmar Bergman film....something that leaves you depressed and feeling that life has no meaning!!

The film begins with Marie a veteran ballerina. When she receives an old diary, she begins to think back to her youth and her doomed relationship with an ultra-serious young man, Henrik. You see them enjoying each other and looking to the future...all the while you KNOW it cannot end well....and it doesn't. By the end, Marie has said that he hates God, that life has no meaning and she's essentially waiting to die...all a bit much for a 28 year-old woman.

The overall film is naturally unpleasant. It has lovely moments but considering how it all plays out...well, let's just say it's NOT a movie that the clinically depressed should watch!! Worth seeing but not among Bergman's very best--mostly because although the film is shot so wonderfully, it's existential angst is tough to watch AND it made me laugh in the flashback scenes at a nearly 30 year-old actress is playing a girl of only 15!

Reviewed by TheLittleSongbird9 / 10

One lovely summer...

Actually there is nothing wrong with Summer Interlude as such, it's just that I don't think it is quite on the same level as Ingmar Bergman's very best. Bergman's direction is as always superb. The cinematography positively shimmers, and the images of the sunny Swedish countryside are beautiful to look at. The writing is thought-provoking, affecting in its honesty and sweet in how it deals with the romantic elements. The story still has the dramatic intensity and structural complexity that helps to form the best of Bergman's films. The two lead characters are touching and are likable, Marie being world-weary and Henrik being timid. The acting helps to reflect that, especially Maj-Britt Nilsson whose performance is so sensitive that you wonder why she wasn't in more after this and Secrets of Women. Birger Malmsten is not quite in the same league but gives a well-contrasted performance still. All in all, a lovely film if not quite among Bergman's very best movies. 9/10 Bethany Cox

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