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Kevin Kline and Sissy Spacek in L'été indien (1986)

User reviews

L'été indien

24 reviews
6/10

A Take of a Hairy Chest and Freckles!

  • bsmith5552
  • Jun 21, 2020
  • Permalink
6/10

People with integrity.

I liked the writing in this movie. I felt it to be very realistic. Acting was authentic. I liked the fathers advice and the wife Ruth is truly a person I admired how she dealt with the situation. As I said well written for true life type of situation that could happen. People with integrity such a pleasure to see in a movie. Well done.
  • lydiajp
  • Mar 30, 2022
  • Permalink
6/10

family

Gussie Sawyer (Sissy Spacek) and Henry Squires (Kevin Kline) were high school sweethearts in a small seaside town. She left to be a globetrotting photographer, first for fashion and then news and finally war. After more than a decade, she goes home for a visit. Henry is now married to Ruth Squires (Bonnie Bedelia) with a teenage son.

I've never heard of this movie. It seems to be a minor flop at the box office. The cast is top level. Director Jack Fisk is married to Sissy. The writer is mother to a couple of big time Gyllenhaals. The question becomes whether these connections are enough. Certainly, they got some big name talents to join the project. That does make this intriguing simply for their presence. The premise is fine if somewhat challenging. After all, they are breaking up a happy family. The pacing is leisurely like the location until the dinner. Then it's a leisurely jog. The story is simple. This is most intriguing for individual moments of performances.
  • SnoopyStyle
  • Dec 11, 2023
  • Permalink

A Simple Yet Engaging Drama

This movie doesn't have a lot of great visuals (with the exception of a quick shot of Kevin Kline's cute, naked butt). It doesn't have fast-paced action.....But the story and the acting make it a great film. Kline, Spacek, and Bedelia put in some great performances, and they make this film an intense drama, with their subtle and realistic portrayals. It's certainly not the best film any of those actors ever did, but it is truly a joy to watch them in.
  • santsa70
  • Feb 24, 2002
  • Permalink
4/10

Handsome, but dull, vapid example of the Woman's Picture...

In a picturesque coastal town in Maryland, a married family man is reunited with an old sweetheart, a pretty photographer who's been traveling the world for the last fifteen years. Putting freshly-scrubbed Sissy Spacek in the role as 'the other woman' doesn't really sit right with us because, basically, it's tough to swallow Spacek as the proverbial homewrecker. Sissy's real-life husband Jack Fisk directed the film, and although he sets up some good-looking shots, he doesn't feel the need to involve us in this character's thoughts: does she have a selfish agenda or is she removed from all the confusion and heartache she causes? The screenplay is a limp, squashy mess--a compendium of Woman's Picture clichés--and Kevin Kline doesn't have much to do but stare at others thoughtfully or look conflicted. *1/2 from ****
  • moonspinner55
  • Apr 27, 2006
  • Permalink
2/10

Seriously, I am Horrified

I watched this film starring actors I love but was totally disappointed. Its about marital infidelity. You can put beautiful stars in the leading roles but it doesn't take away from the horrible situation. It seems like this film is glorifying being a home wrecker.
  • Anaban444
  • Nov 7, 2020
  • Permalink
1/10

Turkey when I first saw it and remains so on second viewing

Dreadful script full of fake characters and bad acting resulting from bad writing and non existent direction. This movie proves you can have an abundance of talent involved and still manage to make a truly dull movie with no creditability or truth on the screen. Sad to see such talent wasted.
  • laskinner-124-924636
  • Apr 20, 2021
  • Permalink
8/10

A Little Known, And Vastly Underrated Romance

I was vacationing in Ocean City, Maryland when this film was being made. I remember hearing on the radio that the production crew was looking for background extras for some early scenes in the film. I wish I had tried out for one! I have always had a soft spot in my heart for this film, not simply because I love Ocean City, but because this movie is proof that a simple story, told with honest sincerity, can rise head and shoulders above flashy production values and overblown dramatics. Spacek and Klein do quite well with their lead roles. Low-key dramas like this seem more down to Earth because this is how real people such as ourselves would act in similar situations. By wisely omitting any shots of the many high rise condominiums of northern Ocean City, the filmmakers have done an excellent job of portraying this as a small coastal town. If romantic sentimentality is not your thing, you'll probably yawn through this movie. But if you're the type of person to often look back and wonder "what if," then Violets Are Blue is certainly worth your time.
  • lisa-kevin3531
  • Jun 7, 2009
  • Permalink
1/10

So sad I cried

  • leighbj
  • Dec 20, 2012
  • Permalink

I love Kevin Kline.

Kevin Kline is one of my very favorites. He's quite sexy in this film. Sissy Spacek is beautiful. When the two looked at each other, they made the screen melt. This is one time I was rooting for the 'other woman.' It makes us all think about the one that got away.
  • Marppreis
  • Apr 24, 2002
  • Permalink
5/10

Why would you want to go home when you've already been around the world?

  • mark.waltz
  • Jul 7, 2025
  • Permalink
10/10

Violets Are Blue

I have seen the movie so many times and still love it. I think the Theme Song is great (as well as being a tearjerker). If you have ever let a girl get away or lost her to someone else, this movie really hits home. If you know Ocean City, Md.; it will make you long for a vacation. Sissy Spacek, Kevin Kline and Bonnie Bedelia give excellent performances. This movie gives a great impression of Ocean City and the scenes on Assateague are excellent. If you haven't seen this film I would recommend that you try to find it or at least watch for it on TV, (though, I haven't seen it listed lately, on TV). If you are a Sissy Spacek fan or have visited Ocean City, I recommend this film, you'll love it.
  • gwy1932
  • Nov 28, 2005
  • Permalink
10/10

So many memories

This movie brought back so many memories of Ocean City, Maryland. My husband and I met there and we had so many fond memories.....we were together 33 years years and since his passing two years ago, I find myself traveling to the ocean to recapture that peace and tranquility we both had there. The movie lets me see and remember those things that young people experience in a small resort town. We lived there during the late 60's early 70's and the movie pinpointed one of the buildings we had lived in during that time, what a pleasure it was to watch the actors walk through places that my husband and I had shared many years ago......thank you!
  • irishgypsyeyes
  • Mar 2, 2005
  • Permalink
10/10

Such a beautiful film!

I've watched this movie at least 30 times, and I never get over how amazing it is. Sissy Spacek, Kevin Kline, and Bonnie Bedelia are so compelling, and I pine for Ocean City over and over again! This movie will take you back to every "what if" you ever had. A classic!
  • allieg8r94
  • Jun 26, 2002
  • Permalink
8/10

Bonnie's Best

  • dansview
  • Dec 7, 2012
  • Permalink
10/10

A great film!

I saw this when I was 8 years old. Since I live in Maryland, I was so excited to find out that a movie was being filmed in Ocean City. Its definitely one to see if you enjoy a good tear-jerker. Sissy Spacek is wonderful as Gussy Sawyer, the former girlfriend of Henry Squier (Kevin Kline). There are some scenes with the Boardwalk of Ocean City that makes me homesick every time I see it.
  • SweetPea313
  • Feb 22, 2002
  • Permalink
10/10

Heartbreaking...

A movie everyone can relate to. Lost love, a chance to go back and relive the past. I think everyone would like to try it just once. Kevin Kline is the sensitive leading man, and Sissy Spacek plays a great 'other woman'. Set in Ocean City, this movie will leave you remembering "The Good Times".
  • willa2puddy
  • Dec 11, 2001
  • Permalink

Good. Specially if you like Sissy Spacek

Have you ever imagined yourself going back to your birthplace after many years away? Well, imagine so. There you are, meeting your love from old times, now married. Would all that flame come back? What would happen? This film is about this. A very good option for a rainy Sunday afternoon. And Sissy Spacek, like always, shines.
  • Hof-2
  • Dec 12, 2001
  • Permalink
8/10

Strong romantic drama

You might have missed this romantic drama when it was released in the 1980s, but try to find it if you can. It's surprisingly good, and Sissy Spacek gives a great against-type performance.

Violets are Blue has a simple story: high school sweethearts are parted as their lives take separate paths. Once reunited, fifteen years later, they still feel the spark. The beauty is in the details, which makes this movie stand out among the genre of "second-chance romances". In a great exchange, Sissy Spacek talks to her father, John Kellogg, about her feelings for her ex-boyfriend, Kevin Kline. He tries to talk her out of rekindling the relationship, and she insists that Kevin's life has been a series of mistakes. He didn't choose the end result; things just happened to him. "That's how we choose: we let it happen," John says. It's a profound statement, and it not only makes sense in the film but also in real life.

The sweethearts, Sissy Spacek and Kevin Kline, have similar interests but different priorities. While he has a passion for writing and she has a passion for photography, he's content to stay in their small coastal town and take over the local newspaper. She itches to explore, and she travels around the world making a name for herself and her photos. When she returns to town, she's the local celebrity. Sissy doesn't usually get to play glamorous career women, and she gives a great performance as she feels out of place in Kevin's world, envious of the chances that passed her by, frustrated by the choices he made, and still glad of the path her own life took.

This might not be the best movie to watch with your spouse, as it might spark an unpleasant conversation about ex-sweethearts, but watching it by yourself or with a good friend will give you a great evening. I highly recommend this one. The leads are young and beautiful, they have great chemistry, and the script gives everyone an interesting point of view.
  • HotToastyRag
  • Jun 2, 2020
  • Permalink

Lost Opportunity

Basically the flick's a one-note romantic beat whose steady repetition sags over time, despite the compelling end. Actually it's a Spacek showcase as she's up-close in most every scene. In fact, I've almost got her nubile girlish features memorized, despite her being near 40 and without noticeable make-up.

So, movie-wise, will Spacek and lover-boy Kline finally get together after so many years apart. They appear made-for-each-other both professionally and romantically. Trouble is he's now married with a growing son, and living an editor's life in his and Spacek's home town. Meanwhile, successful photo-journalist Spacek suddenly returns from abroad to apparently rekindle their mad love from years before. So what will happen as they re-engage, while Kline's dutiful wife (Bedelia) looks haplessly on.

Now had the script and director played up the drama inherent in the material, it might have worked. But they don't. Instead it's a steady stream of Spacek close-ups as she and Kline cavort romantically. And unless I missed something, we never do find out what kept them apart for so many years after their initial fire-up. Also, the spotty conflict between wild horses vs condo clearances just drops in loosely despite its potential that would have added needed flair. Then too, more scenes of actress Bedelia would have added a vivd presence and much needed drama.

Anyway, it helps somewhat that Spacek delivers a lively engaging performance. However, Kline appears just going-though-the-motions, which may be because Spacek's real-life husband Fisk is directing and clearly favoring his wife camera-wise. All in all, I can see why this rather dull 88-minutes soon fell into obscurity. Still, Spacek not only survived but soon flourished.
  • dougdoepke
  • May 29, 2022
  • Permalink
10/10

A Touching and Memorable Story About Longing for the Past

I'm not a huge fan of romance movies in general but when in the mood I usually go back and watch the ones that touched me. I remember seeing this film when in first came out in 1985, around the time of my high school graduation. It's stayed with me all these years. If nothing else, you'll have a hankering to visit Ocean City, Maryland on a warm summer day. I visited the town over 30 years after this movie was released and it was one of the first things I thought of!

In the opening scene we're introduced to Augusta "Gussie" Sawyer (Sissy Spacek) and Henry Squires (Kevin Kline), young lovers on the eve of their high school graduation and the start of their adult lives. Both have dreams of leaving their hometown and setting the world on fire in their respective careers. (he in journalism, she in photography) Fast forward 13 years. Gussie has achieved her dream...she is a successful photographer, a celebrity in the town she was dying to escape from. Returning home for the first real vacation in years, she by chance runs into Henry, who's now married with a son. They soon realize nothing's changed and they are still in love, sharing stolen moments desperately trying to find a way to bring back the past.

The remainder of the film is a bittersweet story of lost love and leaves the viewer torn. Henry's wife, Ruth, is a wonderful woman, (played by Bonnie Bedelia, bringing a depth and dimension to the character that only a skilled actress could manage) a lady content with her life in the "small" coastal town in a house decorated with artifacts from rummage sales and making French toast for her "men." Ruth knows that a part of Henry has always wanted bigger things than running a small town newspaper while she's happy with life as it is. It's left unspoken as they raise their son but it's always there. Now the past has returned and a choice must be made that will be irreversible one way or the other.

The movie is more than just a simple romantic story of lost love and "the one that got away" but is a metaphor itself. The wistful longing for warm summer days in a beautiful coastal town, knowing the season is short and will soon be gone. The "old timers" who live in the town year round that give it a sentimental feeling of a vanishing age. The old, time worn houses that are past their prime. Childhood memories of amusement parks and the fun that goes by far too fast. Returning home to aging parents (John Kellogg is moving as Gussie's gruff but warm hearted father) who offer wisdom and unconditional love. It all gives it a feeling of a wonderful time that's short and fleeting but where the memories will last forever.

I'll watch any genre; war, western, horror, dystopian science fiction, true crime and usually romance is my bottom pick, but I highly recommend Violets are Blue, even if you watch it just once. Sorry it seems to be forgotten these days, it certainly doesn't deserve to be.
  • kgehebe
  • Feb 7, 2022
  • Permalink

Love rekindled after 15 years.

This movie is a natural for me because, when I was young I wanted to grow up to be Kevin Kline and I wanted Sissy Spacek as my girlfriend. It didn't quite work out that way.

Here she is August "Gussie" Sawyer and he is Henry Squires, high school sweethearts in this Maryland coastal town. When his father died Henry had to take over the newspaper while Gussie wanted to see the world and became a prominent photojournalist, traveling all over the world on assignments.

Now some 15 years later Gussie returns to her hometown for a visit, she finds Henry there happily married and with a 13-yr-old son. But as soon as they meet they see the passion is still there. Henry's wife is devoted but not stupid, she recognizes what is going on.

The last half of the movie is a morality play of sorts, does Henry give in to the mutual desires and leave with Gussie to team up for a big assignment, and probably leave his family for good? Or does he do the right thing and honor his marriage vows, and be a good husband and father?

This isn't a particularly novel theme but with the actors and direction it is a worthwhile movie. Of note the director is Jack Fisk, the real-life husband of Sissy Spacek, in fact as of now, 2020, they have been married for 46 years.
  • TxMike
  • Aug 9, 2020
  • Permalink
8/10

A well crafted sailing movie

An endearing and well-crafted love story set in a small town on Maryland's eastern shore. This movie has some excellent small boat sailing sequences, including a pretty exciting Hobie cat race. Sissy Spacek is portrayed as a competent sailor, with sailing as an important element in both the plot and in the relationships between the characters. This movie is particularly appealing to me because the characters approach sailing the way most of us do; it's their recreation, it's what they do for fun.
  • JohnYawl
  • Jan 10, 2004
  • Permalink

Too bad it's not supposed to be a travelogue.

  • Byrdz
  • Jul 20, 2016
  • Permalink

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