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Sommarlek

  • 1951
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 36m
ÉVALUATION IMDb
7,5/10
7 k
MA NOTE
Sommarlek (1951)
DramaRomance

Une femme solitaire se souvient de son premier amour treize ans auparavant, lors de courtes vacances d'été.Une femme solitaire se souvient de son premier amour treize ans auparavant, lors de courtes vacances d'été.Une femme solitaire se souvient de son premier amour treize ans auparavant, lors de courtes vacances d'été.

  • Director
    • Ingmar Bergman
  • Writers
    • Ingmar Bergman
    • Herbert Grevenius
  • Stars
    • Maj-Britt Nilsson
    • Birger Malmsten
    • Alf Kjellin
  • Voir l’information sur la production à IMDbPro
  • ÉVALUATION IMDb
    7,5/10
    7 k
    MA NOTE
    • Director
      • Ingmar Bergman
    • Writers
      • Ingmar Bergman
      • Herbert Grevenius
    • Stars
      • Maj-Britt Nilsson
      • Birger Malmsten
      • Alf Kjellin
    • 47Commentaires d'utilisateurs
    • 43Commentaires de critiques
  • Voir l’information sur la production à IMDbPro
  • Voir l’information sur la production à IMDbPro
    • Prix
      • 2 nominations au total

    Photos99

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    Rôles principaux27

    Modifier
    Maj-Britt Nilsson
    Maj-Britt Nilsson
    • Marie - Balettdansös
    Birger Malmsten
    Birger Malmsten
    • Henrik - Student
    Alf Kjellin
    Alf Kjellin
    • David Nyström - Journalist på tidningen Året Om
    Annalisa Ericson
    Annalisa Ericson
    • Kaj - Balettdansös
    Georg Funkquist
    Georg Funkquist
    • Farbror Erland
    Stig Olin
    Stig Olin
    • Balettmästare
    Mimi Pollak
    Mimi Pollak
    • Fru Calwagen - Henriks faster
    Renée Björling
    Renée Björling
    • Tante Elisabeth
    Gunnar Olsson
    Gunnar Olsson
    • Prästen
    Emmy Albiin
    Emmy Albiin
    • Farbror Erlands trotjänarinna
    • (uncredited)
    Gerd Andersson
    • Ballet dancer
    • (uncredited)
    John Botvid
    John Botvid
    • Karl - Vaktmästarbiträde
    • (uncredited)
    Ernst Brunman
    Ernst Brunman
    • Kapten på skärgårdsbåt
    • (uncredited)
    Julia Cæsar
    Julia Cæsar
    • Maja - Påkläderska
    • (uncredited)
    Eskil Eckert-Lundin
    Eskil Eckert-Lundin
    • Orkesterledare på teatern
    • (uncredited)
    Carl-Axel Elfving
    Carl-Axel Elfving
    • Budet med paket till Marie
    • (uncredited)
    Douglas Håge
    Douglas Håge
    • Nisse - Vaktmästare på teatern
    • (uncredited)
    Torsten Lilliecrona
    Torsten Lilliecrona
    • Ljus-Pelle - Ljusmästare
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Ingmar Bergman
    • Writers
      • Ingmar Bergman
      • Herbert Grevenius
    • Tous les acteurs et membres de l'équipe
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Commentaires des utilisateurs47

    7,57K
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    Avis en vedette

    7sol-

    Simple but well made early Bergman

    Bergman's films are always interesting to look at, and this one is no exception. Some of the film's best visuals include a bleak white sky that only a black silhouette of the protagonist can be made out walking against, and a couple of excellent montages: one being the opening shots of slight movements in clouds, in a river and of rubbish on a footpath; the other being a montage of steam, skies and water as a boat sails along. Bergman also pays a lot of attention to sound here too, and in particular there is something rhythmic about the chugging boat sounds, and these sounds can be heard at times throughout the film even when the boat is not visible on screen. Silence, such as at the doctor's office, is also distributed well throughout.

    The directing work in this early Bergman film is on par with some of his best direction. His screenplay is however well below par. It is one of his least challenging scripts - a simple tale of love between two young persons with none of the philosophy or analysis about how human beings function that make most of his films so interesting. It is well made, but often nothing more than sentimental fluff. The stop animation work is an awkward inclusion too and the film is full of unimportant events, such as the ups and downs of the ballet, that really have absolutely nothing to do with the story at hand. It is not one of Bergman's best films by far, but still a good sign of things to come from him, and fairly pleasant viewing. It is sort of similar to 'Wild Strawberries', and therefore it is rather amusing to hear the main character ask her lover whether he wants to pick some wild strawberries with her!
    8kekca

    My rating: 8

    Love story perfectly told. Life story perfectly told.

    First of all I was angry watching the to lovers being enormously happy. It was so unreal and idealistic that I said to myself - you can see this only in movies. The two lovers were talking the strange language of love that makes them fool around and boost. That makes them feel the need to show off and to be something more. That naive language of their naive youth.

    Suddenly this romantic cloud was blown away and this movie become more realistic, lifely realistic. Yeah, it was trivial but told in Bergman's way it was also very beautiful and true. It showed the change that we all live trough the language that is familiar but we do not speak any more, the things in life and the life caught in the walls of self preservation, senselessness and absurd where the only one escape is the ultimate love - the only reality.

    http://vihrenmitevmovies.blogspot.com/
    loig7

    lovely "little" film

    This is a film, quite simply, I went out to buy on video. I thought it was lovely -in its proper sense- and a nice change from the big man's subsequent, more serious projects. The film recaptures youth's giddy, carefree, brief love affairs ...and its comeuppance, its consequences in future life. Anyone who's been in love around that age will know it always remains within you, like a shameful secret, a cherished hurt ("ah, if only I had...") for a long, long time, no matter what turn things take, however successful one can become (the protagonist : a ballerina). Bergman was already showing his knowledge of human nature. ...Of course, the story (the first part of the film) doesn't meet a "happy ending". What can I say : lovely, and not least for the Swedish language !

    PS-Recently, in a program on the history of exploitation (i.e. naughty films) and censorship in the US, it was revealed that quite a few scenes, showing the heroine skinny-dipping in the lake with not much on, were routinely added to this movie !!
    10ian-ference

    The first masterpiece of the great Swedish master

    On the face of it, "Summer Interlude" is a fairly straightforward narrative; a ballerina (Marie, masterfully played by Maj-Britt Nilsson) in her late 20s (so in the ballet world, nearing the end of her career) seems detached from the world. She lives with a fairly stolid and boring tabloid journalist (David, in a wonderfully understated performance from Alf Kjellin), but doesn't seem terribly invested in their relationship. On the day of the dress rehearsal before opening night, a package arrives containing a journal - she opens the journal, and suddenly she feels emotion again - as if part of an interior wall is starting to crack. She takes a ferry out to an island where she spent her childhood summers, and flashes back to a summer romance that occurred there in her teenage years - and thus a complex, beautiful, and tragic story begins.

    This is considered by most - including the Swedish master himself - to be Bergman's first mature film as a director, and with good reason. His previous offerings, while showing glimpses of the promises he would deliver on later in his career, were hampered by his limp, flawed male protagonists. This is the first film in which he explores the female as protagonist, a trope which would continue through most of his career, and it's clear that he has a much better grasp on the female psyche than on the male - with one notable exception ("The Seventh Seal"), his male protagonists often come off as variants of the director himself. Marie is at once strong, uninhibited, and vulnerable as a young woman, and Nilsson plays this role sublimely. As a mature ballerina, she has the appearance of strength that comes from a deadening of the emotions, rather inhibited, and invulnerable - a woman behind a wall she was forced or persuaded to build around herself. Nilsson also takes on this role masterfully, showing the versatility and virtuosity of an actress whose career peaked far too early.

    The male lead, and Marie's love interest, is Birger Malmsten as Henrik - also wonderfully played as (by this point "yet another") incarnation of young Bergman himself. But unlike the male leads of previous films, Henrik is played with such an earnest innocence and naiveté that we can't help but buy into this wonderful performance. This isn't the director subtly displaying a sense of self-loathing, but rather, baring his soul through his marvelous script and direction. The ancillary roles are all excellent, as can be expected from actors working under Bergman. Stig Olin is particularly fantastic as the master of the ballet company. Kjellin's "regular guy" is believable in both his distance and his frustration, and lascivious "Uncle" Erland (Georg Funkquist) is delightfully seedy and erudite. Gunnar Olsson - the obligatory Bergman priest - is a very minor character, but fits perfectly into the few scenes he appears in. The rest of the supporting cast is fantastic.

    As one would expect from a Bergman film - especially an early collaboration with his first significant cinematographer, Gunnar Fischer, and frequent editor Oscar Rosander - the visuals are stunning. I won't get over-technical here, but a wonderful mix of slow-fades, natural summer lighting, and exceptional composition make this a visual gem. Working on-location - a rarity for Bergman at this point in his career - he masterfully captures the feel of a short (6-8 week) Swedish summer, from the cuckoo that officially announces the start of summer to the owl that signals its approaching end. The lighting is masterfully achieved; contrast the scene when Marie first bumps into Henrik on the island to that where she walks down the hospital corridor. Every scene - including the outdoor ones, which are far more difficult - are perfectly focused and use exactly the right perspective.

    Thematically, "Summer Interlude" is almost a crystal ball we can stare into to see the marvelous things the director would do in the future. Love, and its reverse. Life, and its reverse. The questioning of god's existence, relevance, and goodness. This is one of the first Bergman films to significantly use the mirror as a thematic element, in two back-to-back scenes, near the end of the film - this theme would be repeated in many future films, from the shattered mirror in "The Magician" to the dual mirrors in "Cries and Whispers", this would be a leitmotif that Bergman would employ time and time again. There is a chess scene in "Summer Interlude" that would directly evoke that of "The Seventh Seal" had the former not been shot 5 years before the latter. The distance between Marie and David tangibly feels like the silence between the sisters in "The Silence".

    The overall TL;DR synopsis: This is a beautifully shot, wonderfully acted portrayal of young love that evokes Bergman's recurring themes of love, loss, the distance that necessarily exists between people, the silence of god, self-reflection, and the existentialist notion that we might as well move forward because otherwise, all we do is wait for Godot. The first masterpiece of a director I consider second only to Tarkovsky, and easily in my top 10 of his films - which is saying a lot. A solid 10/10.
    7lasttimeisaw

    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.

    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      A French review by the budding film director Jean-Luc Godard declared that Sommarlek (1951) was "the world's most beautiful film".
    • Gaffes
      The shadow of a boom mic is visible in two scenes - once near the beginning of the film in the office of the dance studio, and once in the cramped lake house.
    • Citations

      Marie: I don't believe God exists. And if he does, I hate him. And I'll never stop hating him. If he stood before me, I'd spit in his face. I'll hate him for as long as I live. I won't forget. I'll hate him till the day I die.

    • Autres versions
      When the film was released in the United States in 1954 its distributor spliced in unrelated scenes of bathing that were filmed at a nudist colony in Long Island.
    • Connexions
      Edited into Pommes d'amour (2001)
    • Bandes originales
      Swan Lake
      Written by Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky

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    FAQ15

    • How long is Summer Interlude?Propulsé par Alexa

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 1 octobre 1951 (Sweden)
    • Pays d’origine
      • Sweden
    • Langue
      • Swedish
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • Summer Interlude
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Blasieholmen, Norrmalm, Stockholm, Stockholms län, Suède(Marie takes the ship from Blasieholmen after the rehearsal)
    • société de production
      • Svensk Filmindustri (SF)
    • Consultez plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Box-office

    Modifier
    • Budget
      • 434 000 SEK (estimation)
    • Brut – à l'échelle mondiale
      • 17 551 $ US
    Voir les informations détaillées sur le box-office sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      1 heure 36 minutes
    • Couleur
      • Black and White
    • Mixage
      • Mono
    • Rapport de forme
      • 1.37 : 1

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