Posts Tagged ‘Melancholia’

Charlotte Gainsbourg “Likes To Be An Instrument”

Friday, January 13th, 2012

Charlotte Gainsbourg “Likes To Be An Instrument”

Dargis Annotates The Opening Eight Minutes (And 16 Shots) Of Melancholia

Friday, December 30th, 2011

Dargis Annotates The Eight Minute-16 Shot Overture Of Melancholia
While – Scott Musicalizes On Tree Of Life

“I’ve suffered from depression my entire adult life, but 2011 was the first year I began to understand and accept this fact. In retrospect, my inability to fully embrace my depression was itself a sign and symptom of depression. One bright spot I’ve found is Lars von Trier’s latest film, Melancholia.”

Monday, November 21st, 2011

“I’ve suffered from depression my entire adult life, but 2011 was the first year I began to understand and accept this fact. In retrospect, my inability to fully embrace my depression was itself a sign and symptom of depression. One bright spot I’ve found is Lars von Trier’s latest film, Melancholia.”

DP/30: Melancholia, actor Kirsten Dunst

Friday, November 18th, 2011

AND… two of her Melancholia co-stars…

Wilmington on DVDs: Melancholia.

Monday, November 14th, 2011

 

Melancholia (Four Stars)

Denmark: Lars von Trier, 2011 (Magnolia, Amazon Instant Video)

Depression can be a state of anxiety and sorrow in which the world seems to swallow you up. Lars von Trier, who is nothing if not  depressive, on a grand scale perhaps, reverses that process in his new film, Melancholia. He, the artist, swallows the world up instead — using his art as a filmmaker and his fears as a human to hurl our planet (and all of us) into his private darkness and funk, plunge us into his own gloom and (final) doom.

By the way, von Trier was a jerk to make jokes about being a Nazi at the Cannes Film Festival.  It wasn’t funny. He’s no Mel Brooks. Speaking as a descendant of European Jews, whose father just escaped the Holocaust,  I think von Trier should, in future, more carefully measure his remarks, especially when the world is his stage. I will now drop the entire subject, because his film is a stunner, and no one has ever said that a superb artist couldn’t also be an asshole. (Richard Wagner, for example, who was my father’s favorite composer.)

Melancholia…What can you say about a film which begins and ends with the end of the world — and imagines that end in the most extravagantly arty 19th century way, with a musical lament from Wagner’s “Tristan und Isolde” Prelude, falling birds and images of star Kirsten Dunst (who plays the movie’s depressive heroine Justine, von Trier’s emotional stand-in) floats by in the water like Millais’ Ophelia, while images of apocalypse resound like Wagnerian chords, or the prelude of Stanley Kubrick’s 2001: A Space Odyssey, restaged for some lunatic Festival of Armageddon? It better be beautiful — or von Trier will look like a fool. It better be striking; it better be memorable. It is.

After Melancholia’s gorgeous angst-ridden prelude to (or prediction of) catastrophe, von Trier takes us into a contemporary but somewhat Rules-of-the-Game-ish world where the rich and privileged are gathered for a party: a wedding celebration for melancholy Justine and her painfully indulgent new husband Michael (Alexander Skarsagrd), who forgives her everything — and there’s a lot to forgive. Accompanying this odd, mismatched foredoomed-in-every-way couple is a huge beautifully dressed assemblage  that includes Justine’s initially well-adjusted, can-do sister Claire (Charlotte Gainsbourg, of von Trier’s nightmare Antichrist), Claire’s rich, ultra-rational husband John (Keifer Sutherland), Justine’s nasty mother and nutty father, Gaby (the great Charlotte Rampling) and Dexter (the superb John Hurt), Justine’s money and ad-conscious boss Jack (played by Stellan, the elder Skarsgard),  and dozens of others. A fine cast, all of whom excel at partying and theatrical disintegration.

If the evening seems familiar, it’s because we may have seen before such dysfunctional movie gatherings as the wedding parties run by Robert Altman (A Wedding), Jonathan Demme (Rachel Getting Married), and — a favorite of mine that tends to get ignored in these lists– Krzysztof Zanussi’s  Contract. I’ll bet the party though, that most inspired or engaged von Trier (or aroused his competitive juices), was Thomas Vinterberg’s 1998 Danish birthday feast, The Celebration, the international arthouse hit produced by von Trier’s Dogma 95. The two films are quite similar in mood and style, at first — at least during von Trier’s film’s first part (called “Justine”), before apocalypse takes over in the second, “Claire.”

Von Trier is both close to Dogma here, especially The Celebration, and a long ways away from it. He began his career with films that were highly theatrical, visually flashy, almost Wellesian (The Element of Crime, Zentropa/Europa), then made a marked shift to the bare-bones, ultra-indie, jittery-camera style of Dogma 95 and Breaking the Waves. At first, his story’s victims were men; then they became women — preferably big famous beautiful, finance-able and adventurous movie stars like Nicole Kidman or here, Claire Dunst. Now, he seems somewhere between the two, and I wish he’d stay there. Dogmatism of any kind can wear you out. 

In this movie, the staging is complex, the acting is emotional, and the visuals are both spontaneous and lush. The structure is simple. The Melancholia party goes seriously off the rails. Then we discover that our universe is going off the rails as well. A large dark planet named Melancholia is heading toward Terra, and, within days, this world will collide with us, and wipe us out of the skies. Life, movies, politics, financial collapse, love, hate, The Cannes Film Festival: none of it will matter. The chords will crash, the world will end. Kaputt. Why was the wedding party so oblivious to impending doom? Why is Michael still so convinced it won’t happen? Why does Justine seem now not self-indulgent or mad, but prescient, right? Is she? 

In any case, the film is beautiful. Extremely beautiful and very anxious. Depressing, but what did you expect? Listen, face facts: We will probably never see a happy Lars von Trier movie. Or maybe I’m wrong. Maybe this is the one.

Spoiler Alert

 

End of Spoiler

Critics Roundup — November 10

Thursday, November 10th, 2011

J. Edgar |Yellow||||Green
Jack and Jill |||||Yellow
Melancholia (limited) |Green||Green|Green|Green
Into the Abyss |||Green|Green|Green
Elite Squad 2 |Green||||

Look, Lars. It’s A Hole, Lars. Dig, Lars, Dig!

Tuesday, September 20th, 2011

Ayee-eeee… Yeah, okay. I remember that… Terrible… I had a feeling that she was kind of reacting. But then I thought ‘Ah, these Americans, they’re always so scared of everything, you know… Oh f—. Oh f—…This is why I shouldn’t do interviews—I should just shut up and I should do my films. This was terrible to listen to.”
Look, Lars. It’s A Hole, Lars. Dig, Lars, Dig!

TIFF ’11 Reviews: Oslo, August 31 and Melancholia

Sunday, September 18th, 2011

Oslo, August 31

One of the last films I caught at TIFF this year, almost by accident, was Oslo, August 31, the sophomore effort of Reprise director Joachim Trier. Oslo, August 31 reunites Trier with Anders Danielsen Lie (who played Phillip, the troubled writer of Reprise) in this spare film about addiction, the choices that define a life, and what happens when you’ve screwed it all up so badly that you can’t see a way back out through starting over.

The film opens with a spate of “I remember ….” voice-over memories of growing up in Oslo from a chorus of unseen voices, then unceremoniously introduces us to Anders (Anders Danielsen Lie), a 34-year-old recovering addict, once a promising writer, now a recovering, suicidal addict who’s about to get out of rehab.

Shooting in Oslo, and setting the film as summer transitions into fall, Trier uses camera angles and shadows to give Anders’ return to Oslo a closed off, foreboding vibe that plays well with the sense that the recovering addict feels already that all the doors are shut, his path already chosen. It’s clear that Anders doesn’t believe in himself, so it’s hard for us to believe in him. Trier chooses not so much to foreshadow the ending of the film with its beginning, as to deliberately telegraph it, an effective dramatic device that forces the audience to feel Anders’ sense of despair, isolation and hopelessness.
(more…)

TIFF ’11 Dispatch #1: Can You Say Party? I Knew You Could.

Friday, September 9th, 2011

Another year, another Toronto International Film Festival.

It doesn’t feel like a whole year since the last TIFF, but here we are, back in the land of ketchup chips and butter tarts, churning through four-five movies a day. The fest has a different feel to it this year, with most everything officially moved down to the vicinity of the TIFF Lightbox. Last year everyone was still adjusting to the move and grumbly about moving downtown, but this year it’s starting to feel like an actual festival center: lots of folks schmoozing and networking at the Canteen at the Lightbox, or grabbing a coffee at the Second Cup across the street because the concession stand at the Lightbox only serves drip coffee (the horror!).
(more…)

Von Trier: “If I am an idiot in the eyes of the world, so be it”

Saturday, September 3rd, 2011

Von Trier: “If I am an idiot in the eyes of the world, so be it”

Ebiri’s Surprisingly Lovely Tale From A Long-Lead Screening Of Melancholia

Thursday, July 7th, 2011

Ebiri‘s Surprisingly Lovely Tale From A Long-Lead Screening Of Melancholia

Trier Blames Some Of His Presser Disorientation On Being Sober

Friday, May 20th, 2011

“I had actually been drinking quite a lot, but now I’m sober, I would suggest to everybody, don’t stop drinking.”
Trier Blames Some Of His Presser Disorientation On Being Sober

Here’s Cannes’ MP3 Of The Complete Von Trier Presser

Friday, May 20th, 2011

The Unedited Video Of The Melancholia Press Conference
And  – The Downloadable MP3

New Yorker’s Richard Brody Extends Dislike Of Von Trier’s Films To Trier

Friday, May 20th, 2011

“I don’t think that this provocation was intentional; rather, it seems to have been a case of bad taste and bad judgment that nonetheless revealed an attitude of heedlessness and willful provocation that is in fact a part of his art, and which reveals its ugliness.”
New Yorker’s Brody Extends Dislike Of Von Trier’s Films To Trier

Trier Understands Hitler?

Wednesday, May 18th, 2011

The best angle on Lars’ latest proclamation, especially for Kirsten Dunst’s sustained, shocked reaction.

Five unobstructed excerpts from Melancholia:

(more…)

Lars Von Trier Siger, At Det I Almindeligt Engelsk

Monday, August 2nd, 2010

“It’s a beautiful movie about the end of the world. It will look like s—. No, I hope not, but a little s—tier than the one I did before. I have a plan and nobody will ever find out what the plan is.”
Lars Von Trier Siger, At Det I Almindeligt Engelsk

The Onset Of Von Trier’s Melancholia

Monday, August 2nd, 2010

The Onset Of Von Trier’s Melancholia