‘Flickorna‘ (the English title is ‘The Girls‘), made in 1968, was probably the most ambitious film in the directorial career of Mai Zetterling, a personality of Swedish cinema that I discovered while watching this film. Mai launched herself as an actress and had quite a bit of success in Sweden as well as in England and the United States, but when she was approaching the age of 40 she decided to abandon acting and go behind the camera as a director. She would return to acting towards the end of her life to confront Anjelica Houston in ‘The Witches’. ‘Flickorna‘ was her third film, a very interesting but also very controversial production, both for its unusual format and for its declared political, pacifist and feminist content. We can say that it is a manifesto expressed through refined artistic means. The reception was mixed, the audience and some critics turned their backs on the film, and Mai Zetterling did not direct anything for almost ten years. I liked the film, especially because it seems to me to have become terribly topical again.

The main heroines of the film are three actresses who go on tour in remote regions of Sweden with a performance of Aristophanes’ ‘Lysistrata’. They are three mature women, each facing their own problems in their personal lives. Liz’s marriage is on the verge of falling apart because of her husband, who already has a mistress and is looking for ways to get out of the relationship. Marianne is a single mother who is forced to take her baby to rehearsals and on tour, entrusting him to the care of babysitters. Gunilla already has four children, whom she leaves during the tour in the care of her husband, who is not too happy about the situation. Their experiences intertwine with the feminist and pacifist text and message of the classic comedy, which is used to convey women’s feelings, but also their ideology. But is this form of engaged theater relevant and effective? Liz’s attempt to engage the audience in a discussion about the meaning of the play after the performance is a failure.
The film is made in 1968, a turning point and perhaps the most revolutionary year of the Cold War – the year of the student uprisings in Paris, the protests against the Vietnam War in the USA and the Prague Spring and its crushing by the invasion of Czechoslovakia by Soviet tanks. Mai Zetterling was part of Ingmar Bergman’s circle of collaborators and friends, but her art is much more explicitly committed to feminist and pacifist ideologies. The three actresses who play the main roles – Bibi Andersson, Harriet Andersson and Gunnel Lindblom – were also among Bergman’s collaborators in theatre and film. I really liked the way personal problems are combined with political messages, the theatre in the film alternating the lines on stage with sequences from the lives of the protagonists. Aristophanes’ text remains relevant to this day and will continue to resonate with viewers as long as women’s equality in rights and opportunities is not fully achieved and as long as wars continue to be decided and fought by men. The questions that ‘Flickorna‘ asks about the place of women in society, about the power of art and the influence of culture in politics and about peace as an alternative to the endless chain of wars and violence are brought to the screen in an elegant manner and seem painfully relevant today more than ever.