A Nutty Nightmare From Lars von Trier

A Nutty Nightmare From Lars von Trier

Published: May 17, 2009 @ 3:56 pm
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By Eric Kohn

Five days into the festival, it would appear the nuttiest entry has arrived.

I doubt anyone can top the sheer madness and graphic absurdity of Lars Von Trier's "Antichrist."

At first, it's an elegant grief drama. Then it transforms into "The Shining" meets "Evil Dead" with green politics, torture porn and a fair amount of Lynchian abstractions.

It's also supremely misogynistic, or maybe it twists misogyny around to mock the very concept. Catherine Breillat could have a field day figuring that one out.

The movie begins with the apparent suicide of a young child, seen in the stylish black-and-white prologue jumping out of a window while his parents (Willem Dafoe and Charlotte Gainsbourg) screw in the next room.

The rest of the story unfolds in chapters, starting with "Grief," where the child's mother (never given a name) endures an intense period of mourning while her husband (also anonymous) relies on his training as a psychotherapist to help her cope.

Von Trier ("Dancer in the Dark") is known for his versatility and inventive techniques, such as the the low-tech Dogma Manifesto. And his depth of storytelling has ranged from offbeat comedies ("The Boss of It All") to Brechtian critiques ("Dogville" and "Manderlay") and self-reflexive social commentary ("Epidemic").

But nothing on his filmography approaches the mayhem of "Antichrist," an utterly strange and deeply perverted take on the horror genre.

In the credits, Von Trier dedicates the movie to the late Russian filmmaker Andrei Tarkovsky, a pretentious move to be sure -- but also something of a key to understanding Von Trier's intentions.

Like Tarkovsky's "Solaris," the thrust of "Antichrist" comes out of a familiar narrative backdrop, which Von Trier subtly intellectualizes, struggling against all odds to transcend the boundaries of the form or at least create a spectacular failure in the process.

In the case of "Solaris," this meant turning a basic science fiction concept into high art; with "Antichrist," Von Trier intends to broaden the thematic potential of cinematically-induced fear.

Following the logic that she must confront her greatest fears, Dafoe takes Gainsbourg on a trip to Eden, their tiny cabin in the woods. And that's where the movie rapidly accelerates into a barrage of psychotic
episodes.

Without revealing too much, let's just say that somebody goes crazy, and somebody else endures a lot of pain. Vividly.

There are several movies with elements of the horror genre competing at Cannes this year, including Park Chan-wook's vampire tale "Thirst," Johnny To's comic action romp "Vengeance" and Brillante Mendoza's largely detestable kidnapping thriller "Kinatay."

However, "Antichrist" goes further than all of them with moments keenly designed to make you cringe, including a couple of genitalia gags worthy of Jack Smith. Kudos to the American distributor with the guts to pick it up. Von Trier's name will sell the movie to an arthouse crowd, but some may hate him for it.

Digesting the Cannes buzz from afar, many must be wondering: Beyond the grotesque imagery, is it any good? One sign: the audience of journalists booed the screening, and again at the press conference on Monday.

Tags: Antichrist, Cannes, Lars von Trier, Movies
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