Originally released under
the title Dragonfly, this offbeat
story depicts the unexpected circumstance by which romance helps a troubled
individual recover from psychological trauma—and though the film obviously
means well, major problems with character development undercut the intended
impact. Beau Bridges plays Jesse, a tightly wound young man who has spent most
of his life in a mental hospital. When the picture begins, he receives
permission to exit the facility, though his doctor (James Noble) wonders
whether Jesse will be able to handle the harshness of the outside world. Intent
on finding the family that abandoned him after a mysterious childhood incident,
Jesse treks to his hometown of Danbury, Connecticut, and, eventually, enters a
movie theater. The theater’s pretty candy-counter clerk, Chloe (Susan
Sarandon), discovers that Jesse has no place to stay, so she invites him home
even though he’s clearly unwell.
This single moment virtually undoes the entire
movie, because it makes no sense that Chloe would take in a man whom she has
already seen manifest symptoms of instability and volatility. Even the
tender/tough dynamism of Sarandon’s performance isn’t enough to sell the
story’s central contrivance, and producer-director Gilbert Cates—who often
thrived telling stories about people with emotional problems—makes several
tonal missteps, not least of which is scoring the movie with music so dark that
One Summer Love occasionally feels
like a horror picture. Unfortunately, Bridges’ performance hurts credibility,
too; while he approaches individual scenes with appropriate levels of intensity
and/or warmth, he’s unable to overcome the falseness of a character who lashes
out in rage whenever it’s narratively convenient for such a thing to happen.
The weakest section of the picture, however, involves Jesse seeking lodging
with a hotel owner (Ann Wedgeworth) who all but rapes the younger man. If One Summer Love was, in part, meant to
be a coming-of-age story, then a physical encounter between Chloe and Jesse
would have added more soul to the film. Yet the picture recovers, somewhat,
once Jesse finally tracks down family members, even though the movie’s final
scene is a puzzler. One Summer Love
isn’t a satisfying movie, by any stretch, but it is worth watching largely for
Sarandon’s performance and for the gauzy atmospherics Cates uses to evoke the
sleepy rhythms of small-town life. If logic is one of your cinematic priorities,
though, take a pass on this one. (Available
as part of the MGM Limited Collection on Amazon.com)
One Summer Love: FUNKY
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