A Summer Place
- APPROVED
- Year:
- 1959
- 130 min
- 857 Views
Hi, Johnny.
How are reservations coming in?
Coming in slow, Claude.
Mail's in.
Stretch the paint, Todd.
All we wish to do is put up a good front.
It ain't the only thing running thin
around here.
- Mail seem any heavier?
- I think so, Dad.
"Paint it thin," he says, Johnny.
Quality don't mean nothing no more
around here.
When your grandpa was alive,
things was different.
That veranda, full of elegant guests
all summer long.
Real guests, not them paying kind.
Yeah, but Grandpa was rich,
and we're not.
Oh, Sylvia?
This is very amusing. Almost hilarious.
Remember that fellow my father hired
as a lifeguard and tutor...
...about 20 years ago, Ken Jorgenson?
What ever made you think of him?
Well, he's turned into a millionaire.
Listen:
"Dear Bart Hunter, I am chartering
the yacht Ramona at Nassau...
...and taking my wife and daughter
for an extended cruise.
I'd like to end up at Pine Island
for the summer."
You see how he worked that in?
The mention of the yacht
and the extended cruise?
It's hilarious, isn't it?
- What is?
- Well, isn't it obvious?
He wants to come back here
after 20 years just to gloat.
He's heard I've been wiped out
and running this place as an inn...
...so he gets a bright idea.
"Well," he says, "what a triumph.
I'll just go and stay there.
Maybe Bart Hunter will carry my bags.
I might even give him a tip."
- Obviously I'm turning him down.
- For the love of God, why?
I just don't feel in the mood
to be triumphed over all summer.
Bart, this isn't a hobby any longer.
We need the money desperately.
He asked for accommodations
we don't happen to have.
Two bedrooms
with a connecting sitting room.
- Let's give them our room upstairs.
- Where would we sleep?
In the gardener's cottage out back.
In the servants' quarters...
...where he even slept himself before
with the hired help?
That's ridiculous.
Three people at $20 a day
for room and meals is $60 per day.
Times 90 days is $5400.
And as of now, we are flat broke.
Because we're broke doesn't mean
we have to lose our dignity.
Dignity? The whole place is run-down
for lack of money.
Our credit's evaporated,
the garden's gone to seed, the roof leaks.
Our son has to go to college this year...
...and you'd give up $5400
because of dignity?
Bart, we're fighting for our lives.
You never seem to realize that.
Those are the clothes I bought for you
in Nassau.
Forty-four long. Put them on.
If you think I'll wear this yachting cap,
you're crazy.
- The man in the store said...
- I don't care what he said.
I'm not a yachtsman.
And you have to belong to
the Nassau Yacht Club to wear this insignia.
I think we're past the point
of pretending we're something we're not.
We charter a whole yacht
to arrive in Pine Island in style.
The yacht was your idea.
The point is, there'll be people on the island
who'll remember me when.
And I'm not putting on any dog.
Let's plan to try to make them forget
you were an employee there...
...not remember it, shall we?
Pine Island off the port bow, sir.
Molly.
There she lies, baby.
- I see a big house in the trees.
- There's 12 big ones on the island.
- One of them's for sale.
- You wanna buy it?
- How'd you know?
- Mama told me.
as a surprise if...
Now, there's a big "if."
Those 12 houses on the island
were built by the founders of Pine Island.
They incorporated.
And now their descendants run the island
like an exclusive club.
You have to be looked over
and voted on and all that.
The islanders are still "they" to you,
aren't they, Papa?
Then why are you coming back?
Maybe I just wanna check...
...and see how much
memory can exaggerate things.
To most people, I guess the island's
just another summer place.
It's a lot more than that to me.
And I hope it will be to you.
There's a boy up there watching me.
There he goes.
Funny feeling,
being looked at without knowing it.
Remember that family
that lived next door to us back home?
- Yeah.
- Their son used to look at me.
Without you knowing it?
Well, his bedroom was right across
from mine.
And one night, I felt naughty...
...and went right on undressing
so he could see.
And then all of a sudden l...
I got terribly ashamed,
and I ran to pull the curtains down.
I'll never forget, I had hot and cold flushes
all over me afterwards.
Wasn't that awful?
Well, I guess every human being on Earth's
got a few things he's ashamed of.
All right, you two,
come below and dress for shore.
- Daddy, do I have to?
- Do you have to what?
Wear this middy blouse ashore
like a 12-year-old.
She says I have to wear
this armor-plated bra to flatten me out.
And a girdle.
She says I bounce when I walk. Do I?
- Do I?
- In a pleasant and unobjectionable way.
When we arrive at the inn,
I want her to look completely modest.
She means like a boy,
flat like a pancake.
This thing even hurts.
And I couldn't blast my way
into this cast-iron girdle with dynamite.
I've had just about enough rebellion
for one afternoon.
First you...
Molly has a lovely, healthy figure.
- Why do you try to destroy it?
- I don't want her stared at.
So you insist on desexing her...
...as though sex were synonymous
with dirt.
- She isn't flying any owner's pennant, sir.
- Then it must be the Jorgensons.
I'll take the wagon down.
Oh, if he tries to tip you, spit in his face.
There he is.
And wearing just what a Midwesterner
thinks a yachtsman should wear:
- Blue coat, brass buttons, white...
- Please be cordial, Bart.
- A gentleman.
- Of course.
A gentleman is one
who never insults one unintentionally.
I have a headache.
I'm going to our room.
Make my apologies.
Apologies to Ken Jorgenson?
You're out of your mind.
Mrs. Jorgenson, Miss Jorgenson,
I'd like you to meet my father, Mr. Hunter.
Welcome to Pine Island, ladies.
Young man.
Weren't you the lifeguard here
a while back?
I was, Mrs. Hamble. Quite a while back.
- Jorgenson, aren't you?
- Yes.
- Living in the gardener's cottage in the rear?
- Oh, not anymore, ma'am.
- We're here as guests this time.
- We?
Did you marry that pretty thing
you were always teaching to swim?
You didn't fool anyone, you and she.
Not me anyway.
No, I didn't marry her, ma'am.
I met Mrs. Jorgenson in Buffalo.
Buffalo. That's out west, isn't it?
- New York, ma'am.
- Oh, yes, Niagara Falls place.
Are you a lifeguard there now?
- No, ma'am. I'm a research chemist.
- Ken, please.
Greetings, Ken.
- Would you like to escape to your rooms?
- Thank you, Bart, yes.
You'll have to find out all about Buffalo
later on, Aunt Emily.
Thank you very much.
Oh, Bart, is that pretty young thing
his daughter?
I remember him well.
Hardly proper to be so pretty.
Seems to me that all the nice girls I know
are either too fat or too thin...
...or have bad skin and thick ankles.
- This is the sitting room.
- Charming.
Utterly, utterly charming.
And this is the master bedroom.
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"A Summer Place" Scripts.com. STANDS4 LLC, 2024. Web. 22 Dec. 2024. <https://www.scripts.com/script/a_summer_place_19095>.
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