52 Films Directed By Women Vol 1: 22. A SERIOUS GAME (DEN ALLVARSAMMA LEKEN) (Director: Pernilla August)
The 2016 screen version has been adapted for the screen by
Lone Scherfig, a notable director in her own right, with films from the Dogme
95 Italian for Beginners and 2014’s The Riot Club, and directed by former
actress Pernilla August, best known for playing Anakin Skywalker’s enslaved
mother in Star Wars: The Phantom Menace.
The combination of these two talents makes the film intriguing. It premiered to
modest applause at this year’s Berlinale prior to its Swedish release in
September. Reviews were somewhat sniffy. (‘A drearily old fashioned costume
drama’ – Variety; ‘unexceptional’ – Hollywood Reporter; ‘the picture’s best
chances of a life beyond the festival circuit will be in Scandinavian countries
where Söderberg’s writing is known and celebrated’ – Screen Daily.)
The unenthusiastic reviews fail to note the subtle changes
wrought by Scherfig and August to their source material. Lydia (Karin Franz
Korlof) is far more passionate in the early section than in Söderberg’s novel.
The story is told through the eyes of Arvid (Sverrir Gudnason) whom we first
see climbing into his only shirt and suit – he lives in a boarding house – and
slipping on to the back of a carriage to avoid paying his fair. He is
introduced as a proof reader but taken to accompany his editor (Michael Nyqvist)
to visit the painter Anders Stille (Goran Ragnerstam) who lives an island. ‘I
hope you brought your swimming costume,’ he is told. Arvid ,who probably only
owns one pair of underpants, is alarmed. Lydia dotes on her father, describing
herself as having two jobs as a daughter and an assistant. But she is also a
painter in her own right. She gives a small water colour (handy wallet-sized)
landscape to Arvid, which unbeknownst to her, he treasures. On the back, there
is an inscription: ‘I want to get away.’
When Lydia’s father dies, he has the opportunity to marry
her. But he is poor, having no prospects. Or so he thinks. Sent to the opera in
place of the regular critic, he is given a glass of champagne by the parents of
Dagmar (Liv Mjones) and writes a fizzy review that impresses his editor. He
becomes an opera reviewer, dines with Dagmar’s parents and marries her.
Meanwhile, Lydia marries a wealthy acquaintance of Arvid’s editor, Roslin (Sven
Nordin). She lives a life of luxury, has a daughter but the marriage is
stifling.
Lydia doesn’t really get away and Arvid hasn’t married out
of passion. They are both incomplete. He struggles for his father’s respect –
papa (Staffan Gothe) wanted him to be a teacher and not move to the city. She
hasn’t fulfilled her own potential as an artist.
Recognising her own unhappiness, Lydia asks to leave her
husband. He consents to a divorce, offers her a pension, but won’t give her
custody of their daughter. She is heartbroken and contrives, as a mother surely
would, to be with her child.
The emphasis on Lydia’s sacrifice makes this version
feminist. Arvid, by contrast, cannot quite reciprocate. But life has to go on.
Lydia has relations with another man (Mikkel Boe Folsgaard) who,
coincidentally, works at Arvid’s paper. Arvid claims to Dagmar that he is
teaching him Russian whilst in reality he is meeting with Lydia.
August and her cinematographer Erik Molberg chose to film
the majority of the film in a boxed format (1:33) enlarging the screen for
transitions. When I saw the film, I didn’t quite get this – a consequence of my
front row seat – incidentally, the aspect ratio trick was first used by Douglas
Trumbull in Brainstorm in 1983. The
stifling format is meant to represent the conditions in which Lydia in
particular found herself.
Neither Korlof nor Gudnason give break-out barnstorming
performances. I felt this was deliberate. August takes care not to elevate her
characters too far above their circumstance, not to appear the smartest people
in the room as it were. (After working with George Lucas, I can understand her
not being keen on Hollywood tropes.) The characters are intentionally not
fully-formed – this is different from traditional star vehicles in which the
lead characters exude certainty.
August and Scherfig
have produced a film that has melodramatic elements but underplays them. It is
frisky, to be sure, but not moving.
Should they have tried to engage the audience more with
obvious tricks, ramping up the romance? This would suggest that they believed
in romance and the union between a man and a woman as the answer. The strongest
bond in this movie is between a mother and a daughter. Arvid never does win
over his dad, though the latter gives him the suit that he wore to Arvid’s
mother’s funeral – way to go, pop!
In the time between its Berlin premiere and its September
release, August has time to prepare an audience for the movie that she has
made, not the one they might expect to see. I think A Serious Game might find an audience outside Scandinavia beyond
the festival circuit – take that, Screen
Daily!
Reviewed at the 66th
Berlin International Film Festival, Sunday 21 February 2016, 09:30am, Berlinale
Palast
Originally published on Bitlanders.com

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