Midsommar: The Director Cut

While I saw the theatrical cut of this year’s Midsommar  twice during its release I unfortunately missed the brief run of the film’s director’s cut. At nearly three hours and combined with it quite limited time in theaters I simply never managed to clear my schedule enough to make room for the feature. Now it has been released on home video, the longer cut available exclusively from Apple, and I can give my opinion on it versus the original version.

Director’s cuts of things are not always a blessing. The example that best comes to mind at this moment is the musical Little Shop of Horrors. The director’s cut has an extended sequence at the end where the plants have grown to monstrous size and are kaiju  stomping about the world’s cities eliminating humanity. However by this point ALL of the major characters are dead and there is no emotional tie for the audience making for a dull, plodding, and ultimately boring end to the movie/ The theatrical version is far superior.

Gladly this is not the case with Midsommar. Writer/Director Ari Aster has mostly expanded scenes in this version, carrying various sequences a bit further and greatly expanding the depth of his characters and illuminating more of their natures. There is one wholly new sequence, another ritual by the Swedish cult that follows in the evening of the day after the visitors have witnessed the horrifying attestupa. This evening sequence along with a further dissolution of Dani and Christian’s relationship further isolates the non-cult members and gives Dani’s character a moment to shine as the brightest among the visitors.

Midsommar’s  director’s cut is a deep careful exploration of the themes and wholly satisfying. I can say without reservation that it is my deeply preferred version of Aster’s vision.

 

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