Featuring one of the most
lyrical love scenes in all of ’70s cinema, Summer
of ’42 is an offbeat romance involving a teenage boy and a grown woman.
Compassionately directed by Robert Mulligan, the film takes a bittersweet look
at characters moving through profound life changes, conveying a sense of how
deeply two people can comfort each other in times of need despite coming from
different worlds. Screenwriter Herman Raucher, who adapted his original story
into a novelization after completing the script—the book version eventually
became a best-seller, just like the movie eventually became a sleeper hit—has
said that the tale is autobiographical.
According to Raucher, he was a confused
15-year-old vacationing with his family on Nantucket Island during World War
II, and he became friends with a beautiful woman named Dorothy and her husband,
a U.S. soldier. After the soldier was summoned to active duty, young Raucher
remained friendly with Dorothy. Then, one afternoon, young Raucher arrived at
Dorothy’s house moments after she learned of her husband’s death in combat.
Distraught and lonely, she took young Raucher to bed, and then departed the
island the next day, leaving her adolescent lover only a note.
In the film
version of this story, young Raucher is “Hermie” (Gary Grimes), a curious and
kind-hearted teen spending the summer with his pals Benjie (Oliver Conant) and
Oscy (Jerry Houser). Dorothy is portrayed by the mesmerizingly beautiful
model-turned-actress Jennifer O’Neill. The teen high jinks that comprise much
of the movie’s first half are forgettable, but all of the scenes with O’Neill
have a certain magic. Not only does Mulligan guide O’Neill to a higher
performance level than she ever reached in another project, but Mulligan
captures the wonderment Hermie feels at connecting with a sophisticated adult.
The entire movie has a nostalgic feel, with cinematographer Robert Surtees
capturing the stark beauty of East Coast shorelines and composer Michel Legrand
contributing tender melodies. Yet the appeal of the picture stems almost
entirely from that one key scene—handled with unusual elegance and restraint,
Hermie’s encounter with Dorothy is beautiful and bewildering and sad. The sequence
is poetry.
Alas, the success of the movie compelled Raucher to write a
thoroughly unnecessary sequel titled Class
of ’44, which was produced and released two years after the original film.
Neither director Mulligan nor costar O’Neill returned, though Grimes reprised
his role as Hermie. (Conant and Houser return, as well, portraying Hermie’s
pals, but they remain in supporting roles.) Set during Hermie’s college years—which
are heavily fictionalized extrapolations of Raucher’s real-life experiences—the
bland and meandering picture primarily concerns Hermie’s romance with Julie
(Deborah Winters), a high-strung coed. Julie comes off as difficult and
domineering, and Winters’ performance is strident, so it’s difficult to get
excited about the prospect of these two forming a lasting bond.
Worse, Hermie
emerges as a deeply ordinary collegiate who neither changes significantly during
the course of the story nor has a major impact on those around him. Yes,
he suffers a few coming-of-age blows, such as the death of his father, but
these events feel trite compared with the transcendent experience Hermie had
in Summer of ’42. The likeable Grimes
does what he can with bland material, however, leavening the story’s inherent
navel-gazing quality with admirable toughness. In sum, while the execution of Class of ’44 is more or less acceptable—particularly
in terms of period details and production values—the whole enterprise feels
perfunctory.
Summer of ’42: GROOVY
Class of ’44: FUNKY
1 comment:
A neat bit of trivia about the movie is that one of the girls that is Hermie's age, is played by Kathy Allentuck who is the daughter of Maureen Stapleton and the Broadway general manager Max Allentuck and it is Ms Stapleton's voice which we hear as Hermie's off-screen Mother.
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