Notorious
in the 1960s for its sex scenes, censors in the US and elsewhere may
have had more problems with the left-wing politics of I
Am Curious (Yellow)
and (Blue).From
the place that gave the world Greta Thunberg, this once famously-banned pair of 1960s Swedish films as though foreshadow the
identity passions of today in the sense that 1960s US civil rights activism fed
today’s Black Lives Matter movement. It is an
ambitious project that tells a similar narrative in two films that
complement each other like the yellow and blue in Sweden’s flag,
addressing issues of no less import today than they were sixty years
ago despite the vast social, political, economic, and historical
changes that have taken place.
|
Börje
(Börje Ahlstedt) and Lena (Lena Nyman) cross the line into character in I
Am Curious films.
|
I
Am Curious (Yellow)
and (Blue)
were shot in a “meta” style: A small film collective makes a
movie about a small film collective making a movie about the
sociopolitical and sexual adventures of the “curious” Lena (Lena Nyman), a young woman footloose in Stockholm. But the
sex for which the films initially had been banned around the world is
barely pornographic. Contemporary censors and viewers likely were
offended by the notion that an ordinary young woman would explore her
own sexuality and sexual freedom to challenge her country’s social
status quo. But the protagonist Lena is
less porn queen Linda Lovelace than John Waters’s Tracy Turnblad in
Hairspray
(1988). |
Lena
(Lena Nyman) and Börje (Börje Ahlstedt) engage in post-coital
political
dialogue
in Vilgot Sjöman’s
I
Am Curious-Blue
(1968).
|
The documentary-style rendering
of a young woman openly discussing sex, orgasms and other sexual
bodily functions and having “free sex” in the ordinary run of
things in circa 1966 Stockholm is a far cry from the underground
“blue movies” of the time or the sex film industry to which the
two I Am Curious films
helped open the door in the 1970s. The films
portray an assertive, politically left-leaning, sexually curious but
naive heterosexual woman in her early twenties discussing politics
and having sex with
contemporaries, pursuing her own curiosity and desires with partners
roughly as clueless in their own ways as she is in hers. The personal
relationships come first.
|
In the I
Am
Curious
films, filmmaker
Vilgot Sjöman and his star Lena Nyman construct a critique of contemporary Swedish society.
|
The
film opens with young filmmaker Vilgot Sjöman,
playing himself, in a relationship with his star Lena, a drama
student playing herself, contemplating how to tell a story about
contemporary Swedish society. Inspired
by the US civil rights movement, the character Lena challenges
Swedish society by trying to apply Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.’s
principles of non-violent resistance/non-cooperation to achieve
social, economic, gender, and sexual equality. The drama student Lena
also half-teases Sjöman
to film a sex scene between herself and a student she
spots at a poetry reading—“just
a quickie”.
|
“We’d
like to know a little bit about you for our files/We’d like to help
you learn to help yourself”: The file room of Nymans Institut in
Vilgot
Sjöman’s
I Am Curious
films.
|
The
character Lena establishes “Nymans Institut” in her bedroom at
her father Rune’s (Peter Lindgren) apartment where she lives: “I
had to start my own business because [others] don’t do anything:
Newspapers work too fast and can’t be trusted. Science works far
too slow and gets no results. You have to do it yourself.” She
collects data aided by informal assistants with whom she also pickets
institutions (the church and the US, Soviet, and Chinese embassies).
She and her collaborators sing “We Shall Overcome” many times in
both films. She pens picket signs that read: MEDDELANDE
TILL MÄNSKLIGHETEN; RIV PRIVILEGIE—SAMHÄLLENA RUNT OM I VÄRLDEN
[LENA] (Message to humanity—down with the privileged classes all
around the world) and MEDDELANDE TILL DE FÄRGADE FOLKEN: FÖRBERED
ER! DE VITA SVIKTAR! [LENA] (Message
to non-white people—be prepared! White people are failing!) There
were very few non-white people in Sweden at this time.Lena
and her helpers also vilify the then-Spanish dictator/autocrat
Francisco Franco, picket the Spanish embassy, and Lena challenges
Swedes at the airport returning from vacations in Spain for tacitly
supporting Franco’s regime: A woman traveler retorts that Sweden’s
“dictatorship” makes a bottle of whiskey cost 50 crowns, as one
might imagine a US follower of Fox News grouse today). Lena keeps a
picture of Franco on her wall and a running tally on her bedroom wall
of the number of days since her father purportedly “fled” the
1930s Spanish Civil War after serving just three weeks in the anti-Franco International Brigade. (The film was banned in Spain until 2005.)
Lena
throws herself into the mainstream of Swedish life with a portable
reel-to-reel tape recorder slung from her shoulder, posing questions
on current topics to incidental men and women at work and on the
street. She asks national service inductees if they would consider
conscientious objector status. She campaigns for prison reform,
biking 150 miles to the then-new maximum security Kumla
prison in
western Sweden. She opposes the högern (the political right),
particularly högerstedenterna—conservative students. She and
Sjöman
interview figures such as Dr.
King, the Swedish socialist politician Olof Palme, the Soviet poet
Yevgeny Yevtushenko, and Sweden’s King Gustaf VI Adolf (played by
actor Holger Löwenadler).
|
Film
recording supervisor Raymond Lundberg and his assistant do "yoga" with
Lena on retreat in
I
Am Curious-Blue (1968).
|
Sjöman
films himself making statements that Dr.
King appears to answer directly (from an interview on the US civil
rights movement filmed earlier in Sweden). Lena tells Sjöman:
“I like [King]. He talks about better things than Palme,”
referring to the then-Swedish transport minister, a rising star in
the country’s Social Democratic Party who opposed the US war in
Vietnam. Sjöman
films himself filming an actual
interview with Palme in the minister’s backyard with his then
five-year-old son Mårten “Råttan” [Mouse] and his wife Lisbeth
at an upper window. The films were made before King was assassinated.
(Palme, later Sweden’s prime minister, was assassinated in February
1986. Palme’s unsolved murder is modern Sweden’s greatest
mystery.)
|
Filmmaker
Vilgot Sjöman
interviews Swedish
politician Olof Palme with his five-year-old son Mårten in I
Am Curious-Yellow
(1967).
|
Sjöman
and his crew also
film Soviet poet Yevgeny Yevtushenko at a university poetry reading.
Yevtushenko was a “rock star” of the Brezhnev regime, a
charismatic, youthful-looking, officially-sanctioned “dissident”
poet popular in the West.
Yevtushenko’s comments at the reading are later spliced-in to
rebuke Lena’s naive political views. Her interview
with the king of Sweden
(Löwenadler)
is a fantasy that includes her lover Börje
(Börje Ahlstedt) as the king’s grandson, in which she reassures
His Majesty in his living quarters: “It isn’t you, personally,
the socialists want to get rid of...”
|
Lena
(Lena Nyman) and King Gustav VI Adolf (Holger Löwenadler)
at home
in the palace in I
Am Curious-Yellow (1967).
|
And
Lena experiences lively varieties of sex, in character and as a
person. She surprises her film partner Börje
(who lives unmarried with the mother of his baby daughter, which Lena
later discovers) when she says that she
has had sex with 23 men. “The first 19 were no fun” she said,
because she “did it to satisfy them, so that they would have an
orgasm...” The
director Sjöman
tells himself that “a love scene without consequences would be
pointless.” He tells his actor Börje
at the beginning of Blue
that Börje will have a love scene with Lena: “A love scene with
consequences.” “What kind of consequences?” “I don’t know.
I’ll think of something.” Sjöman
works this out while filming Lena and Börje,
telling himself: “[Ingmar]
Bergman always used to say it’s bad to fall for your star. You get
blind to her affectations. It never happened to him, though.” Or so
Sjöman
supposed.
|
Lena
(Lena Nyman) and Magnus
(Magnus
Nilsson)
watch
the film crew prepare in
Vilgot Sjöman’s
I
Am Curious-Yellow
(1967).
|
In a moment of passion, Lena
confesses to her ideal: “Listen, Martin! I’m sorry I wasn’t
strong enough. But that’s the way it is. Börje
is a big shit, and I’m going to kill him when I get my hands on
him! You said it yourself: ‘If you can’t adhere to nonviolence,
you shouldn’t participate.” You need people who are strong. I
won’t ever speak for your ideas again.”
But Lena’s adventures
free-range a large expanse of social, political, economic, and sexual
topics and give a broad picture of the universal influence of the
1960s US civil rights movement which may apply to an even greater
extent in the form it takes today.
Jag är fri!!! Reformera världen!
Jag är
nyfiken-En film i gult/gul
[I
Am Curious (Yellow)]
1967 Sweden (121 minutes) and Jag
är nyfiken-En film i blått/blå
[I
Am Curious (Blue)]
1968 Sweden (104 minutes)
Sandrews/Criterion. Written
and directed by
Vilgot Sjöman;
cinematography
by Peter Wester; edited by Wic Kjellin; music by Bengt Ernryd;
produced by Göran
Lindgren.
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