http://www.filmunlimited.co.uk/Cannes/0,4029,221856,00.html
Day eight: Screaming success at the scaffold
Lars Von Trier's latest movie
extravaganza polarised critics, but
Fiachra Gibbons loved it. He
reports exclusively from Cannes
Wednesday May 17, 2000
In Scandinavia they referred to Breaking
the Waves as Breaking the Wives, and
film-maker Lars Von Trier is at it again
with Dancer in the Dark, putting his
women through the full range of physical
and psychological horror with such an
unwavering gaze that at times it's hard to
sit there and watch. This will be the film
that goes down in history for its heroine
singing from a scaffold. The final, almost
unbearable scene in which Björk's blind
criminal is marched the 107 steps from
the condemned cell to the gallows makes
for the movie's most bizarre and
gut-wrenching song and dance number.
When she cannot stand up, she is
strapped to an upright board where she
sings - or, more accurately, Björks - while
we wait to hear whether the authorities will
allow a blind woman to be hanged without
a hood because "she just can't breathe
with one on".
Boasting a motif from The Sound of
Music, Dancer in the Dark is the most
unusual, extraordinary feel-good musical
ever made - but you may have guessed
that already. The critics in attendance at
the screening were either visibly moved or
not so much booing as hissing or
bellowing with rage. Never have I seen a
reaction like this to a film, and never have
those reactions been so shockingly
divided.
Björk - who Von Trier had branded a 'mad
woman' only a fortnight ago after she tried
to block its screening because of cuts to
her score - refused to appear alongside
him and her co-star, the legendary French
actress Catherine Deneuve, to answer
questions. However, she did attend last
night's gala screening in Cannes.
Björk's spokeswoman said she was "too
frightened" by the attention he
performance had attracted, and Deneuve
disclosed that she was so traumatised by
the experience of playing the part of
Selma, a Czech immigrant in fifties
America, that she may not be able to talk
about it for another 10 years.
Von Trier, who has admitted to being a
tyrant, made no attempt to play down
their rift, which culminated in her storming
off the set for four days. She is also said
to have tried to eat her costume in a fit of
rage.
Asked what it was like to work with Björk,
he replied, "It has been terrible but the
results have been incredible. Björk is not
an actor. What was a surprise for me is
that she seemed like a professional but
she really isn't. She is not acting in this
film but feeling everything, which is
extremely hard on her and everyone else
too. It was like being with a dying person.
She was really feeling it all the time. I was
in the awkward position of being the
hangman who was pushing her towards
her death. But it is the only way it could
have been done."
Van Trier, who is so scared of flying he
drove from Denmark in his camper van,
said despite their differences he admired
her performance. "I am extremely fond of
the work she has done and I would like to
thank her for it."
Deneuve, who formed a close bond with
Björk during the filming, and spent New
Year in Iceland with her, did not deny the
tension with Björk on the set. "But it
would be very perverse with such a very
special film to give such importance to
something behind the scenes. Nothing
that is really worth it goes without
difficulties, without tension, without
crying," she said. "The more difficult and
intense a film the more painful it is. Björk
is very special. She cannot really act, she
can only feel. Some of the situations in
the film are so hard, and she was in so
much pain, she could not recover from
one day to the other. Those things made
her behave sometimes like a child, like a
human being who couldn't take it
anymore. Like a child running out of
school, sometimes she would run away.
But when you compare that to the level of
her performance in the film those things
become so little."
She said it was most the most 'extreme'
experience of film-making she had ever
been through, but she found it "worth
every minute. It was incredible what has
been done."
Von Trier, who founded the Dogma style
of simple, pared back film-making, and is
regarded as a major force in world
cinema, joked that he hoped to cast
Deneuve, who famously played a
prostitute in Belle du Jour, in his next
project, a porn film. "She knows many
things about the world that I don't," he
said. "For the first time in my life, I feel
empty."
Despite the movie's torrid production,
Björk is a revelation as Selma, a Czech
immigrant with failing sight, a kind of
innocent, who goes to her death to save
others and in particular her son. In a
supporting role, Catherine Deneuve has
never looked more human, while the
song-and-dance sequences - which owe a
lot to the Eastern European musicals of
the 50s and 60s - are beautiful. Without
giving too much away, you cannot help
but be affected by this film. It leaves you
feeling that you don't know what you feel.
As with the other key Von Trier pictures
(Breaking the Waves, The Idiots), you are
left with the sense that you are either in
the presence of genius or have been
manipulated by a cruel and cynical con-man.
From the ecstatic ovation given to Von Trier at a press conference afterwards, it
is clear that many critics will be angry if
the film does not win the Palme d'Or,
although with opinions so divided they
may also be protests if he does.