By James Bowman on 6.21.05 @ 12:02AM
A beautifully made film.
Writing in the Times of London about the Michael
Jackson trial, Oliver James, a psychologist, notes that "The thing
about people with borderline personality disorder, which I believe
Jackson has, is that they have a weak sense of self -- as evidenced
by the need to change his skin color, his erratic moods and the
fact that he thinks he is Peter Pan. They are constantly acting out
different personalities, which means that the boundary between
fantasy and reality is blurred." As in other ways, however, in this
Michael Jackson stands for so much more than himself. Ours is the
age of borderline personality disorder -- not to mention the Peter
Pan culture of eternal adolescence. The culture that once attempted
to mould and shape us to a particular ideal now turns us loose into
a world of infinite choices, and of nearly infinitely possible
selves, and demands only that we choose. Small wonder if we retreat
and hide from such choices, or pretend like Michael Jackson in his
absurd military uniforms that we can slip from one to another
without ever committing to any.
Pawel Pawlikowski's My Summer of Love is set in West
Yorkshire, England, and concerns two teenage girls on the verge of
adulthood and entertaining such choices. Tamsin (Emily Blunt) comes
from a well-to-do family and has just been expelled from her
boarding school for being a bad influence on others. Mona (Natalie
Press) is a working-class girl who lives above the local pub with
her older brother, Phil (Paddy Considine). She never knew her
father and her mother has died of cancer. Phil, an ex-con, has
recently made a choice of his own, finding Jesus and turning the
pub into a prayer-hall. Mona is deeply upset by this and refuses to
believe in the reality of Phil's new-found piety, accusing him of
being a "faker."
"I miss my brother," she tells him.
"This is the real me," he tries to assure her, and perhaps
himself too.
"I want the old Phil."
"The old Phil didn't make me very happy."
"He made me happy."
Mona, abandoned by her brother (as she sees it) and dumped by
her married boyfriend, Ricky (Dean Andrews), falls back on her
relationship with her new friend, Tamsin, whose own romance of
suffering involves an absent mother, a philandering father, and a
sister, Sadie (Kathryn Sumner), dead of anorexia. The two girls
comfort each other and engage in small acts of vengeance against
those whom they see as having betrayed them, Tamsin's father and
Ricky. When their relationship becomes sexual they seem more than
ever like children -- or Michael Jackson -- trying on adult clothes
to see how they fit. At one point there is a hilarious scene of the
two of them in bed as Mona undertakes to show Tamsin what sex was
like with Ricky. "D'yer wanna be shagged by RrrICK-ah?" says Mona,
putting on a deep voice and assuming the dominant position. Tamsin
agrees and becomes suddenly submissive.
"I'm you," she says.
Mona grunts a bit and says, still in her gruff voice: "Ooh, yer
byootiful, ooh, yer byootiful. Unhh! That's it. Ah've coom. Got to
be off now."
It's a reminder that role-playing is essentially comic, though
in adolescence it takes on a deadly serious, sometimes even tragic
import as we try on our adult roles for size. Pawlikowski
skillfully manages to keep the tragedy always just off screen, but
never far away.
In one of his most revealing scenes, the girls talk about what
they want to be when they grow up. Tamsin plans to be a lawyer.
Mona replies: "I want to work in an abattoir, get a boyfriend who
is a real bastard, churn out all these kids and wait for menopause
-- or cancer." Both girls, that is, realize that life has already
assigned them roles that they don't much care for, and their summer
romance becomes for both -- though for one much more than the other
-- not so much a way of escaping as a way of imagining escape. It
is for them, though of course they don't see it this way, what
Jesus is to Phil, namely a role he is playing as a way of not
playing another one -- "the old Phil" -- he is desperate to
elude.
WHAT I ADMIRED MOST OF ALL about the film was the way in which it
uses the counterpoint between Phil's story and that of the girls to
heighten the emotional temperature. In Phil's case, tragedy really
does break through to upset the balance with comedy as he gradually
and unwillingly comes to acquiesce in Mona's view that the old Phil
is finally inescapable. There is a somewhat scary irony in the fact
that it is Mona's use of her Exorcist-demon voice that she
originally put on with Tamsin to say, "I am the Antichrist!" for in
a way that's just what she is: the voice of what threatens to be a
permanent resignation to the inevitability of sin and death and an
eternity of despair.
At any rate, it is this prank that precipitates Phil's return to
violence and ultimately ends his own flirtation with Jesus, which
now seems as doomed as Mona's with Tamsin. "Get out!" he says to
his fellow-worshipers in the ex-pub. "You're all fakers!" -- just
the word Mona had applied to him and an echo of Tamsin when she
calls him, after playing the temptress just to see if she can do
it, a "f***ing fraud." The girls seem quite likely to recover if
they return to their old lives, as most of us tend to do from first
love and unrealistic hopes, but for Phil, at his age and with his
background, the loss of his hopeful alternative self is bound to be
much more devastating.
Pawlikowski, who also co-wrote the screenplay with Michael
Wynne, is a Polish-born director living in England whose first
feature, Last Resort (2000), represented a promise on
which My Summer of Love delivers. The characters -- though
very little else in the movie -- were taken from a novel of the
same title by Helen Cross, and with his semi-improvisational
technique the director gets tremendous performances out of both of
the young and hitherto almost unknown actresses who play them. Mr.
Considine is also a very considerable asset, while the director of
photography, Ryszard Lenczewski, makes summer in the Yorkshire
countryside look breathtakingly beautiful. The film won the Michael
Powell award for best British feature at the Edinburgh festival in
2004, and it's easy to see why. Shot on a tiny budget of only about
$3 million, it is an object lesson to all independent film
directors in how to do a lot with a little.
topics:
Law, Military