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Summer with Monika (1953,
Swe.) (aka Sommaren Med Monika)
In writer/director Ingrid Bergman's controversial romance
film about lovers on the run (similar to Lewis Gilbert's Friends
(1971) and Terence Malick's Badlands
(1973)) - it was based on the novel by Per
Anders Fogelström and the director's adaptation, and became
one of Bergman's most influential early films - one that undoubtedly
launched his career and had an impact on other filmmakers, including
Woody Allen and Jean-Luc Godard; it was one of the first foreign-language
films that made its brief nudity a major selling point for US audiences,
and helped create the stereotype that Swedish women were sexually
liberated and enjoyed swimming in the nude. [Note:
An earlier Swedish film that created the same sensation due to its
nude scenes was director Arne Mattsson's One
Summer of Happiness (1951, Swe.) (aka Hon Dansade en Sommar).]:
- [Note: Legendary exploitation distributor, producer
and showman Kroger Babb, after purchasing the American rights to
Ingmar Bergman's Summer With Monika (1953, Swe.) cut out
approximately 33 minutes of the film, dubbed it into English, replaced
the musical score with a jazzy one by Les Baxter, and renamed it
to ready the film for the drive-in circuit - it was now known as Monika:
The Story of a Bad Girl (1955). Everything was sensationalized about the main
romantic relationship between the title character and her teenaged
boyfriend, since they had only one controversial scene of nudity (skinny-dipping)
and love-making in the beautiful, sunny outdoors. Babb
advertised the repackaged film with racy taglines
such as: "She's 19 - and Naughty but Nice!", "Everybody's
Talking About Monika!", "The Devil
Controls Her By Radar!", and "Men
Wilt Under the Touch of Her Lips."]
- in the story, a young couple (two disaffected rebel
teens), both from working class families in the industrial port city
of Stockholm, became romantically-attached to each other: boyish-looking
19 year-old Harry Lund (Lars Ekborg) and almost 18 year-old
Monika Eriksson (Harriet Andersson), a grocery store
worker who was viewed as very adventurous, flighty, aggressive
and earthy
- their first
chance encounter in the springtime was during lunch in a local cafe;
the defiant Monika's first words were to reject their work responsibilities;
she encouraged Harry to join her to escape their dull, tawdry lives
and horrible jobs and run away: "People shouldn't work on
a day like this...Let's go away and never come back. We'll see
the whole wide world. You game?"; he blithely agreed: "Sure, let's
go"
- stock room and delivery boy Harry returned to work
at a glassworks and porcelain shop known as Forsberg's where he
was experiencing
problems in his dead-end job; he often argued
with his boss for being
late and for dawdling
- the teens' first
date consisted of watching a tearjerker movie (Song of Love)
at the local movie-house at 7 pm; Monika was emotionally enraptured
by 'Hollywood' and its fantasies of love and escape; afterwards,
they spent the remainder of the evening together, when she asked
for Harry to hold and kiss her ("You may kiss me now, Harry"), and
told him: "I'm crazy about you"
- during their next get-together - dinner at his place
while his widowed, emotionally-distant father (Georg Skarstedt)
was away, Monika told Harry she felt close to him: "Almost like
we're married. You're so sweet, not like the others at all. Like
right out of a movie"; later in the evening they necked and kissed
until interrupted by the arrival of his sick father (who would
soon be hospitalized)
- Monika's home life was troubled
- she lived in a cramped and claustrophobic tenement apartment
with other family members (and slept in the kitchen with "never
a moment's peace"); she was groped,
pinched and ogled by chauvinistic co-workers at her grocery store
job and quit; her violence-prone alcoholic father Ludvig "Ludde" Eriksson
(Åke Fridell) was physically abusive and called her a "sassy
little brat"; she sought refuge with
Harry for the evening, and they slept together in a sleeping bag in his father's docked boat; the
next day, Harry quit his job
- Monika urged them to both pack up and run away:
"Now we can go wherever we like!"; they
took Harry's father's boat out of Stockholm - a languid sequence
(filmed from the boat's point-of-view) as they floated along the
waterways and under bridges to escape from the city
- they were to experience a brief idyllic
and euphoric romance at the beach on Orno Island in an archipelago
throughout the coming summer; as they hugged, they
congratulated themselves for rebelling: "We've
rebelled, Monika, against all of them"; Monika 'played house'
by heating up coffee for them on a portable camping stove as Harry
slept
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During a Light-Hearted and Idyllic Summer - Monika
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- in the film's only scene of very brief semi-nudity,
she stripped off her clothes to sunbathe, then let Harry touch
her breasts before she impulsively jumped up stark naked and ran
to the water; their time of freedom was filled with sun-drenched
cavorting and singing in the outdoors, love-making and romancing,
until Monika noticed one day: "Oh dear, I've grown tubby" -
a sign of her impending pregnancy
- one night, they motored back to town and attended
an outdoor dance on a pier, but when gum-chewing, pig-tailed
Monika saw her previous ex-boyfriend Lelle (John Harryson) in
the crowd, they fled back to the island
- they talked about their difficult family situations; she
complained: "There's so many of us. The brats fight and wreck
everything. Dad's always drunk and kicking up a fuss. Sometimes he
beats us"; Harry spoke of his hopes to attend night school
to become an engineer
- things turned less than idyllic when Monika announced that
she was pregnant; Harry realistically insisted
that they had to return home: "We have to go back so I can start working.
You need proper food," but Monika disagreed: "No,
I'm not going back. I want summer to go on just like this"; Harry
argued: ("Monika, we have to make something real out
of our lives. We'll care for each other. I'll study and get a decent
job, so we can get married and have a nice house, you and me and the
little one on its way")
- Monika
responded by still clinging to a dreamy fantasy of home life - without
any intrusions: ("You'll come home from work and I'll have dinner ready.
We'll take the children for Sunday walks. I won't work. I'll stay
at home with the kids. We'll have nice clothes"); Harry was jubilant:
"We'll have a good life. We'll always stay together" and
she answered: "Just you and me"
Lelle - Monika's Menacing Ex-Boyfriend
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Lelle's Sabotage of the Boat
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Kissing After Fighting Off Lelle Together
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- while coincidentally camping on the same island
within sight of the couple, Lelle jealously sabotaged their boat
by dumping the contents of Monika's suitcase in the water before
setting the boat on fire; Harry fought with and chased after Lelle
while Monika put out the flames; together they beat up Lelle and
kissed in victory
- as the cooler fall months approached, conditions
became more harsh and difficult and
they experienced scarcity of food (with only a diet of mushrooms);
Harry suggested: "We better go home" to provide her with a proper
diet - but she didn't want to
- Monika and Harry were forced to steal food from
the apple orchard and cellar of a vacation house on the island, but
Monika was apprehended by the bourgeois owners; after being brought
inside as they called the police, she ran off into the woods with
a hunk of stolen roast beef, where she animalistically and savagely
gnawed at it as if she was a starving, ravenous and rabid creature
- she met up with Harry in the boat who reminded
her that they had to return to reality - back
to a drearier and gloomier reality in doom-ridden civilization; Monika
screamed: "I'm gonna have a baby, and I have no clothes,
no nothing!" - Harry was more optimistic about their future: "We can't
go on like this. We have to get married, and I need a job to support
us"; Monika protested: " I don't
want to go back... Harry, why
do some people have all the luck while others are miserable?";
Harry answered: "We have each other" and hugged her while admitting the
truth - that their time together had only been a dream-like experience:
("We've been in a dream of our own")
Shotgun Wedding
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Viewing the Baby For the First Time
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Their Claustrophobic Apartment
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Harry's 'Coming of Age' Fatherhood
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- upon their return, they
were forced to have a quiet shotgun marriage and live in a very claustrophobic
rented apartment with their new infant daughter "Little Monika"
(or June as Monika preferred) who kept them up at nights, as Harry
struggled to make a living for them and attended night school to
become an engineer; shortly later, the resentful and frustrated
'bad-girl floozie' Monika, who was lacking any maternal instincts,
became impatient and dissatisfied with her domesticated, monogamous
role as a homemaker-mother with family responsibilities; Monika
played around while Harry's Auntie (Dagmar Ebbesen) took care of
the child during the day
- in the most stunning single image
of the film, she turned toward the camera and locked eyes with it
- breaking the 4th wall - as she sat in a bar and contemplated her
new life as a mother and adult; the lighting behind her slowly faded
to black; it forced the viewer, like a Rorschach test, to reflect
on Monika's true character, future, and situation and almost dared
the audience to judge her
- the unsettled and promiscuous Monika would soon
fall from grace; she was caught cheating by Harry in their own
bed (off-screen) during an affair with her ex-boyfriend Lelle,
when Harry unexpectedly returned a day early from a business trip;
afterwards during a fierce argument and fight about her unfaithfulness
and the fear of eviction due to Monika's overspending, Harry asked
for a divorce; Monika blamed him and worried more about her looks:
"You got me pregnant! Things wouldn't be like this!...And
I'm all ugly now!"; she added: "I want to have fun while
I'm still young";
he repeatedly struck her, and she abruptly left him; it was the
end of their marriage; Harry
responsibly retained custody of their child as a single father
Harry Asking Monika For a Divorce
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"You got me pregnant...I'm all ugly now!"
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Harry Repeatedly Hit Monika
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- the film concluded with a close-up of the grown-up
Harry (who had come of age) wistfully recalling and reprising the
best memories of their time together in the sun-kissed outdoors
(seen in a flashback as he gazed into a mirror while holding his
baby daughter 'Monika')
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Harry Wistfully Recalling His Time With Monika
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Harry (Lars Ekborg) and Monika (Harriet Andersson)
First Meeting In Local Cafe
Movie Date
"Almost Like We're Married"
Necking Together
Deciding to Run Away Together
Rebelling Against Society
Summer on the Island
Returning to Civilization Briefly
Talking About Their Future Together
Monika Sunning Herself on Front of Boat
Harsh Conditions and a Wild Mushroom Diet
Monika Gnawing at a Hunk of Stolen Roast Beef in the Forest
Harry: "We've been in a dream of our own"
Monika: Married - But Now a 'Floozie Bad Girl'
Single-Most Stunning Image in the Film: Monika Breaking the 4th Wall
and Staring into the Camera
Harry's Shocked Reaction to Seeing Lelle in Bed with His Unfaithful Wife
Monika (Off-Screen)
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