Pretty nice retrospective of Garbo's life and career made 15 years after her death in 2005 by TCM. Kind of wish they had made it during her lifetime, because as is, the people alive that still knew her were pretty old, and many of the people interviewed are just the children or grandchildren of those who knew her. The other thing: She retired at 36 and apparently completely disappeared from public life. So as the documentary notes, not much is known about her life after her career. She walked. She had a friend that she walked with and who acted as her confidant, but she lived in America, which means she was completely cutoff from any family. She never had children, and I guess never married. This is never explored. Did she completely give up dating, too, when she "retired." Did she stop going back to visit Sweden? Although it would be easy to call her a hermit or a recluse, the idea presented in the documentary is that she simply liked being alone. Her last film, 1941...
The scene that stands out to me most is when Queen Christina (Greta Garbo) is dressed as a man and has secured the last room in the Inn. Antonio (John Gilbert), the Spanish ambassador, needs a room too. He's willing to share it with the "young man" he assumes Queen Christina to be. She tries to give him the room, but in the end, they do end up sharing it, and once she removes her hat and coat, he discovers she's all woman. It's funny how Garbo has eyelashes and make-up, breasts, and yet, she was able to fool everyone into thinking she was just a young man who couldn't yet grow a mustache... The canapé bed has curtains, and so we assume that she and Antonio spend three full days in bed together during the snowstorm. That's pretty racy, but the curtains always remain closed. Even when the innkeeper comes in to offer them both chocolate, Antonio's is the only voice we hear invisibly respond. So we let ourselves logically imagine that both are in bed toget...