Abstract
Summer with Monika (Ingmar Bergman, 1952) was a point of reference for filmmakers searching
new ways of filmmaking during the 1960s and 1970s because it anticipated the characteristic reflexivity of
cinematic modernity because of the protagonist’s look at the camera. By unexpectedly bursting into the narrative, this gaze becomes a self-conscious strategy aimed at disarticulating not only the cinematic fiction, but also Monika’s fiction, which has symbolically appropriated the imaginary world projected by cinema.