Midsommar’s Deaths Represent The Four Elements – Theory Explained

Midsommar’s Deaths Represent The Four Elements – Theory Explained

Ari Aster’s folk horror movie Midsommar is filled with obscure symbolism, to the extent that the Midsommar deaths explained a hidden connection to the four elements that might expand the whole movie. One theory about the deaths in Midsommar explained that each side character’s death represents the four elements: earth, fire, water, and air. Through these four Midsommar deaths, four seasons are invoked in the rituals of the Hårga cult. This has led to some deep theories about the significance of how each Midsommar character dies.

Midsommar was a breakout hit, and it’s because the cerebral A24 horror movie unravels a slow-burn sense of dread that eventually turns deadly. However, unlike typical slasher movies that simply add to the body count, the casualties in Midsommar seem quite purposeful. Their deaths are meant to symbolize an even deeper connection to the Earth for the Hårga cult, whose religious and cultural practices are somewhat steeped in the tenets of paganism. As such, there’s a widely circulated theory that the Midsommar deaths each represent one of the four elements.

The Harga’s Ambiguous Rituals Are Key To The Midsommar Deaths Theory

Midsommar’s Deaths Represent The Four Elements – Theory Explained

Midsommar explained Hårga’s rituals loosely, and this ambiguity proved fertile ground for a wealth of Midsommar fan theories. Midsommar follows Dani (Florence Pugh), Christian (Jack Reynor), Josh (William Jackson Harper), and Mark (Will Poulter) who travel with their colleague Pelle (Vilhelm Blomgren) to join in the cultural festivities with his ancestral commune. While the sun shines bright as the days amble on, darkness looms over the characters, and they begin to vanish under bizarre circumstances.

To understand why the elemental theory works it’s critical to acknowledge the fact that the Hårga cultists share a strong relationship with the Earth and nature as a whole. Their entire mid-summer tradition serves the purpose of ensuring that they will have a plentiful harvest, healthy livestock, and a growing community with new births. Their insistence on ensuring that they are giving back what they take from the Earth is enough to validate the theory that Josh, Mark, Connie, and Simon’s deaths are symbolic of the four elements.

Josh’s Death Represents Earth

Midsommar Josh

After the Harga cult’s sacred text, Rubi Radr goes missing, the disappearance is blamed entirely on Josh. Prior to the accusation, he is in the current oracle’s home taking photos of the text in order to include it in his Ph.D. thesis examining Midsommar‘s version of the Swedish festival. While taking pictures, he is hit over the head by a member of the Harga cult while a man wearing Mark’s face stares at him, marking the first of the Midsommar deaths. While this particular scene in itself does not point towards any elemental symbolism per se, Josh’s demise is a result of his unhealthy curiosity that verged on ignoring the commune’s rules, for which, he is brutally punished.

It is also interesting to note that Josh’s fate is left unknown until the final fifteen minutes of the movie when Christian runs from the building where he had sex with Maja (Isabelle Grill). As Christian runs towards a small barn, he sees Josh’s foot sticking out of a garden plot with a Swedish rune engraved into the bottom of his foot. This specific rune is known as the Ansuz rune, which represents the transmission of intelligence and knowledge. While Josh was killed for his drive toward achieving his goal to attain as much information on the Hårga cult’s traditions as possible, his death represents earth rather than the selfishness of intellectual gain.

His body is buried under fresh dirt, and his foot sticks out of it like a plant. Midsommar explained this is symbolic of what the Hargas hope to achieve with their mid-summer festivities: give back to the Earth and be rewarded with plentiful crops as a result. Apart from punctuating a truly bizarre and memorable moment in folk horror movie history, Josh’s leg represents the sacrifice of his body for a plentiful harvest, along with the fact that no outsider is deemed worthy of forbidden knowledge within the confines of the cult.

Mark’s Death Represents Fire

Midsommar Mark

The Hårgas kill Mark after he accidentally urinates on their sacred ancestral tree, an act that is interpreted as a massive transgression and insult from the cult’s perspective. As Mark’s death is not immediately established as he is missing halfway through the film after being beckoned by a Hårga girl, it is revealed much later during Josh’s final scene with the Rubi Radr.

Mark’s death was somewhat foreshadowed in the initial scenes of Midsommar, as the children playing “skin the fool” is a direct reference to Mark’s skin being flayed later in the movie, owing to the incredibly foolish act of urinating on a sacred artifact. Notably, Mark does this despite the fact that Midsommar‘s Hårga is a cult. When the final sacrificial scene towards the end is underway, his body is stuffed with hay and placed in a wheelbarrow.

Keeping this chain of events in mind, the distinct way in which his body is prepared indicates that Mark represents the element of fire, because hay burns much quicker than flesh. Hence, it is entirely plausible that the Hårgas chose to gut him and then fill his body with hay, but it does not make much sense for his death to represent fire. Arguably, it would make more logical sense if Christian’s grizzly demise was representative of this element, as the final shot in the triangular building shows him engulfed in flames. However, even compared to Christian, the way Mark recklessly violates sacred ground, not caring about any consequences, is more comparable to the path of a wildfire.

Connie’s Death Represents Water

Midsommar Connie

The truth about what happened to Connie in Midsommar after she attempted to flee the mid-summer festival with Simon has been a major point of discussion. While audiences see the physical bodies of every other character before the final scene, she does not reappear until the very end — in a wheelbarrow. Since her moment of death isn’t shown on screen, there’s been many wondering how did Connie die in Midsommar? The answer lends itself to the Midsommar four elements death theory.

As she’s wheeled into the building, her body is blue, wet, and covered in seaweed. It is obvious that she was drowned by the Hårga members and left in the water until they needed to use her for the appropriate ritual. Therefore, Connie’s death is an obvious representation of water and a possible reference to the fact that her refusal to accept the ways of the commune was literally purged out of her body through death by drowning.

Simon’s Death Represents Air

Simon is shaken up in Midsommar

Out of every side character’s death, Simon’s (Archie Madekwe) is the most unsettling. After Christian sees Josh’s foot in the garden, he seeks refuge in a small barn where he discovers Simon’s body hanging from the ceiling. The skin on his back is peeled from his muscles and positioned to have the appearance of bird wings, which is right in line with the blood eagle method of execution and torture. This kind of torture method has been referenced in great detail in Norse poetry, and it is interesting to note that his eyes are also removed and replaced with flowers.

Perhaps the most disturbing part of Simon’s death is the fact that he is actually alive when Christian finds him. It’s very subtle, but his chest can be seen rising and falling with each painful breath he takes, serving to paint a much more complete picture of the cruelty of Midsommar‘s Hårga cult. With the combination of his body hanging from the ceiling, the wings made from the skin on his back, as well as his continued breathing, Simon represents air.

These four distinct Midsommar deaths — representing the four seasons or four elements of nature – also reflect the journey of each character, and could explain why they were killed in such distinct ways and given important places in the final ritual. For instance, Josh reached too far and had to be grounded back to the earth. Meanwhile, Mark’s indiscriminatingly destructive actions are akin to a wildfire. As for Simon and Connie who insisted on leaving, they were each granted passage, through the elements of air and water respectively.

Whether or not this theory about the four elements is true, Midsommar‘s brilliant use of symbolism is one of the reasons why it’s considered among the best horror movies by A24. It’s also why Midsommmar continues to spawn fan theories years after it was released.

The Midsommar Four Elements Theory Shows How Deep It Is

Midsommar Ending Explained

Midsommar has spawned a lot of fan theories because the movie itself is so rich in symbolism. Despite coming out in 2019, the Ari Aster horror film is still being talked about, thanks to its stunning visuals, exceptional plot, and the fact that the entire movie happens in pure daylight. Part of what makes Midsommar so endearing is it leaves much open to viewer interpretation, and there are a lot of elements interwoven in its symbology that some audiences may miss on their initial viewing. Midsommar is deep because it’s just ambiguous enough to leave questions without being so ambiguous that it’s confusing.

The movie has spawned other theories, thanks to its enigmatic illustrations. One such theory is that after the events of the movie, Pelle becomes the new village Oracle. His crowning at the end of Midsommar and the elder’s speech both point to this, as he is “recognized for his unclouded intuition”, something that is stated earlier as a requirement to being an Oracle. He’s also shown sitting in a tree drawing in the opening’s tapestry — a moment foreshadowing much of the following narrative.

There’s also the theory that Hereditary and Midsommar exist in the same universe, that Maja and Christian actually created the new Oracle, and that Dani was predestined to be Hårga’s May Queen. Right or wrong, these theories prove just how deep Midsommar is, as there are plenty of plot threads left open to interpretation.

What Florence Pugh Thinks Of The Midsommar Theories

Florence Pugh is crowned May Queen in Midsommar

Midsommar made for a breakout movie for Florence Pugh who delivers a complex and compelling performance as Dani. Pugh has also acknowledged that she is aware of a lot of the fan theories surrounding the movie, including one that suggests Dani was in on the plan the entire time and she hoped to lead Christian to his death. Though she didn’t speak to the theory surrounding the four elements and the deaths in Midsommar, Pugh did express (via Den of Geek) that she loves to hear the theories, saying “That’s exciting in itself, the fact that people are wanting to think about it and they’re wanting to change it, and they’re wanting to have their own theories. To make a film that inspires creativity like that is really cool.”

Midsommar Is Based On A Real Swedish Festival

Dan and Ylga stand during the dinner scene in Midsommar

Midsommar‘s gorgeous and grotesque take on cult horror is inspired by the real-life Midsummer Festival, a tradition established by the Swedish Parliament in 1952 to celebrate the beginning of summer. While the Hårga cult performs its ceremonies once every 90 years, the Midsummer Festival is an annual tradition, typically scheduled in late June in line with the Summer Solstice. Just like its fictional counterpart in Midsommar, the Midsummer Festival is filled with symbols of nature, feasting, and ritual dance.

Director Ari Aster chose the real village of Hårga because of the Swedish legend of Hårgalåten, in which the devil disguises himself as a fiddler and tricks the people in Hårga into dancing themselves to death — evocative of Midsommar‘s harrowing rituals. Although the events in Midsommar are very loosely based on Sweden’s real Midsummer Festival and are more of a hodgepodge of spiritual practices from all over the world, there’s something to be said about the effectiveness of horror when it’s tied to reality. This is especially true when that reality is a fun festival that draws tourists to Sweden every Summer Solstice.

Source: Den Of Geek