"Together"
An idealistic '60s commune meets the disco era head-on in this beautifully made film by a young director Bergman called a "master."
By Stephanie Zacharek
Aug. 28, 2001 | After seeing Lukas Moodysson's 1997 "Show Me Love" -- its original Swedish title, "Fucking Åmål," couldn't be used in the States -- Ingmar Bergman said, "We are witnessing the birth of a master." "Show Me Love" was a coming-of-age tale about two teenage girls feeling their way toward falling in love. You could call it a lesbian love story, but it's more about the exhilarating delicacy of any first love, and about teenage listlessness in small towns everywhere. (The title refers to the dull little town where the two girls live.) Moodysson's touch as a filmmaker isn't cloyingly sensitive; it has the roughness of a mother cat's tongue, tender and assertive at the same time.
Moodysson's new movie, "Together" (for which he also wrote the script), is even more beautifully made, suggesting that Bergman's original instincts about him were on the money. Moodysson is a tough-nuts modern humanist -- in that respect he's reminiscent of Jean Renoir, although he works on a smaller, more intimate scale and his approach is entirely different. He doesn't have Renoir's elegance as a stylist, but a Renoirian love for his characters, no matter how maddening their behavior, hovers around them like an aura. Their foibles make up the most vivid colors in his palette; he doesn't allow any superiority or smugness to muddy his view of them. What's more, he has a great knack for ensemble comedy, moving the story along while keeping each character in focus. By the end of the movie, you feel you've moved in with them.
"Together"
Directed by Lukas Moodysson
Starring Gustaf Hammarsten, Lisa Lindgren, Michael Nyqvist, Emma Samuelsson, Sam Kessel
"Together" takes place in a commune in the heart of Stockholm, founded much earlier but still going strong in 1975, long after America's (and most of the world's) youth culture have abandoned their notions of free love, harmoniously integrated extended families and naive political idealism in favor of discos and TV sitcoms. The commune, "Tillsammans," (Swedish for "together") is led by sweet-natured, conflict-avoiding Goran (Gustaf Hammarsten). His girlfriend, the buxom, irresponsible earth mother-flower child Lena (Anja Lundqvist), has designs on another of the house's inhabitants, although she still considers herself Goran's old lady.
The cooperative is a place where sexual openness at least tries to thrive, where homegrown vegetables grace the dinner table with joyless efficiency, and where bourgeois entertainments like television are strictly forbidden. There's conflict in the house, but Moodysson is more interested in the crackling humor, and the grudging love, that courses beneath it. Best of all, he shows no patience for the leftover bullshit of the '60s. When the characters pepper a household fight with tired old agresso-hippie shtick like "Calm down!" and "You're speaking aggressively," he zeroes right in on its smugness and thinly veiled hostility -- but he does it in a way that makes you laugh.
Other inhabitants of the household include Lasse, a cranky medical student (Ola Norell), and his ex-wife Anna (Jessica Liedberg), who has recently declared her lesbianism in the manner of a rooster greeting the morning. (Anna causes a stir one day by trotting into the kitchen wearing a top but no underpants and then aggressively defending her right to flaunt nature's topiary.) Klas (Shanti Roney) is a gay man who has a crush on Lasse; Erik (Olle Sarri) is a sexy, brooding old-style communist who stomps about in a constant state of disgust, annoyed that the rest of the commune's inhabitants (not to mention the world) aren't as committed to the Great Cause as he is.
When Goran's sister Elisabeth (Lisa Lindgren) shows up at Tillsammans, running away from her abusive, alcoholic husband, she seems like a visitor from another planet, with her bottle-blond bob, eyeliner and fuzzy, up-to-date sweaters. Some of the other members, clad in low-key mushroom colors as if ABBA had never happened, view her a bit suspiciously at first. And her two children, 10-year-old Stefan (Sam Kessel) and the shy, awkward 13-year-old Eva (Emma Samuelsson), feel so out of place in this household of weirdo throwbacks that you can almost see them shrinking into the wallpaper.
Next page: "We have ugly clothes, and bad music!"
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