
Title: Intermezzo: A Love Story
Director: Gregory Ratoff
Producer: David O. Selznick
Writer: George O'Neil
Starring: Leslie Howard, Ingrid Bergman, Edna Best, John Halliday
Year: 1939
Genre: Romance, Drama
Distributer: Selznick International Pictures, United Artists
"In music, an intermezzo (pl. intermezzi), in the most general sense, is a composition which fits between other musical or dramatic entities, such as acts of a play or movements of a larger musical work. In music history the term has had several different usages, which fit into two general categories: the opera intermezzo and the instrumental intermezzo."
The story of a famous violinist named Holger Brandt (Howard) who seduces a pianist named Anita Hoffman (Bergman), but Anita isn't just any pianist: she is the one who gives lessons to his 8-year-old daughter, Ann Marie. After coming home from touring, the family introduces him to Anita. After witnessing her piano skills, he seems to be intrigued. Later on, they meet after a show and get together for some glasses of wine at a restaurant. From that point on, things get hectic. They fall in love, leading to Holger's decision to leave his family and run off with Anita to do more touring, this time with Anita as his accompaniment. Things seem to be going well for the two, but they both has repressed feelings of guilt that lead to their separation. Anita goes to Paris in order to fulfill her dream now that she learns she has received the scholarship she had previously been working so hard for. Now Holger must decide what he shall do: should he live a lonely life in Paris, or should he return to his original home and family?
If you are looking for the cheese of the crop, I must declare you look no further. This is the most melodramatic a melodrama can get! The story is one of the classic formulas: man seems to have a great, happy life with a loving family and a prosperous career; man finds himself falling in love with a beautiful stranger who he cannot resist; the man and beau-strange run off together to find their happiness; eventually, things die out for them in sonme way or other, and they must move on with their lives. The acting is something a rat would eat up the minute he got his hands on it, and the script! You know how the scripts go with these tearjerkers.
I had my own personal reason for watching Intermezzo: the film is Ingrid Bergman's Hollywood debut; her first English-speaking film after leaving Sweden. I feel like an amateur when I admit that I haven't seen any other films of Ingrid's besides Casablanca (1942), but I have been wanting to see more of the actress ever since I was first introduced to that enchanting film. In Intermezzo, the audience was lucky enough to get a first look at who was to become one of the all-time greats of the cinema. Those close-ups of Ingrid that everyone has come to cherish and adore, they truly do showcase her beauty in a way that is completely different from any of the other actresses classical Hollywood.

Ingrid had real talent. Whenever you watch her on the screen, you become a witness to something special that you can't get anywhere else but in her films. The way her voice tingles down your spine, the way she woos you as she lifts her head and lets you see her watery eyes; she had IT, and that is something that only a select few actresses have.
Just look at her...she is most definitely IT. No ands, ifs, or buts about it.
________________________________________
A scene from Intermezzo: A Love Story, with Howard and Bergman