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Dancer in the Dark - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Dancer in the Dark

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

For the science fiction short story by David Gerrold, see Dancer in the Dark (story).
'Dancer in the Dark'

Dancer in the Dark movie poster
Directed by Lars von Trier
Produced by Vibeke Windeløv
Written by Lars von Trier
Starring Björk
Catherine Deneuve
Vladica Rostic
David Morse
Cara Seymour
Peter Stormare
Music by Björk
Cinematography Robby Müller
Editing by François Gédigier
Molly Marlene Stensgård
Distributed by Fine Line Features (USA)
Release date(s) France May 17, 2000 (premiere at Cannes)
Denmark December 8, 2000
United Kingdom September 15, 2000
Canada December 6, 2000
United States December 6, 2000
Australia 26 December 2000
Running time 140 min.
Language English
Budget SEK 120,000,000 (estimated)
Preceded by The Idiots
IMDb profile

Dancer in the Dark is an award-winning musical film released in 2000. It was directed by Lars von Trier and stars Björk Guðmundsdóttir, Catherine Deneuve, Vladica Kostic, David Morse, Cara Seymour and Peter Stormare. The soundtrack for the film, released as the album Selmasongs, was created entirely by Björk.

Dancer in the Dark is the third film in von Trier's 'Golden Heart Trilogy'; the previous two films were Breaking the Waves (1996) and The Idiots (1998).

The film was an international co-production between companies based in several countries: Denmark, Germany, The Netherlands, United States, United Kingdom, France, Sweden, Finland, Iceland and Norway.

Contents

[edit] Synopsis

The film is set in Washington state in 1964 and focuses on Selma Jezkova (Björk), a Czech immigrant who has moved to the United States with her son, Gene Jezkova (Kostic). They live a life of poverty as Selma works at a factory with her good friend Kathy, who she nicknames Cvalda (Deneuve). She rents a trailer home on the property of town policeman Bill Houston (Morse) and his wife Linda Houston (Seymour). She is also pursued by the shy but persistent Jeff (Stormare) who also works at the factory.

What no one in Selma's life knows is that she has a hereditary degenerative disease which is gradually causing her to go blind. She has been saving up every penny that she makes (in a tin can in her kitchen) to pay for an operation which will prevent her young son from the same fate.

To escape the misery of her daily life Selma accompanies Cvalda to the local cinema where together they watch fabulous Hollywood musicals (or more accurately, Selma listens as Cvalda describes them to her (to the aggravation of the other theater patrons) or acts out the dance steps upon Selma's hand using her fingers.) In her day-to-day life, when things are too boring or upsetting, Selma slips into daydreams or perhaps a trance-like state where she imagines the ordinary circumstances and individuals around her have erupted into elaborate musical theater numbers. These songs, as do many of Björk's songs, use some sort of real life noise (from factory machines buzzing to the sound of a flag rapping against a flag pole in the wind) as an underlying rhythm.

Unfortunately, Selma slips into one such trance while working a machine at the factory, which she breaks. She is fired from her job. Soon Jeff and Cvalda begin to realize that Selma can barely see at all. Additionally, Bill reveals to Selma that his materialistic wife, Linda, has exhausted all of his savings and asks Selma for a loan, which she declines to give. To comfort Bill, Selma reveals her secret blindness, hoping that together they can share one another's secret. Bill then hides in the corner of Selma's home, knowing she can't see him, and watches as she puts some money in her kitchen tin.

Björk in Lars von Trier's Dancer in the Dark
Enlarge
Björk in Lars von Trier's Dancer in the Dark

The next day when Selma comes home she finds the tin is empty. She goes next door to report the theft to Bill and Linda only to hear Linda discussing how Bill has brought home their safe deposit box to count their savings. She additionally reveals that Bill has "confessed" his affair with Selma, and that Selma must move out immediately. Knowing that Bill was broke and that the money he is counting must be hers, she confronts him and attempts to take the money back. He draws a gun on her and in a struggle he is shot.

Linda discovers the two of them and, assuming that Selma is attempting to steal the money, runs off to tell the police. Bill begs Selma to take his life, and she shoots at him several times, but in her state of hysterics, manages to only maim Bill further. In the end she performs a coup de grâce with the safe deposit box. (In one of the scenes, Selma slips into a trance and imagines that Bill's corpse stands up and slow dances with her, urging her to run to freedom.) She does, and takes the money to the Institute for the Blind to pay for her son's operation before the police can take it from her.

Selma is caught and eventually put on trial. It is here that she is pegged as a Communist sympathizer and murderess. Although she tells as much truth about the situation as she can, she refuses to reveal Bill's secret, saying that she had promised not to. Additionally, when her claim that the reason she didn't have any money was because she had been sending it to her father in Czechoslovakia is proven false, she is convicted and given the death penalty.

Cvalda and Jeff eventually put the pieces of the puzzle together and get back Selma's money, using it instead to pay for a trial lawyer who can free her. Selma becomes furious and refuses the lawyer, opting instead to deprive her son of his mother rather than allow him to go blind. In the end Selma is hanged to death, an innocent woman doing nothing more than trying to make a better life for her child.

[edit] Style

Much of the film has a similar look to von Trier's earlier Dogme 95-influenced films: it is filmed on low-end, hand-held digital cameras to create a documentary-style appearance. The musical sequences are filmed with static cameras, and with the colours enhanced to distinguish them from the rest of the film.

[edit] Production

The film's title derives from a phrase in Joni Mitchell's song "My Old Man" on the album Blue (1971): My old man/He's a singer in the park/He's a walker in the rain/He's a dancer in the dark.

Although the film is set in the United States, it was filmed in Sweden.

Actress Björk, who is known primarily as a pop singer, had rarely acted before, and has described the process of making this film as so emotionally taxing that she would not appear in any film ever again[citation needed] (although in 2005, she appeared in Matthew Barney's Drawing Restraint 9). She had disagreements with von Trier over the content of the film, wanting the ending to be more uplifting.[citation needed] Deneuve and others have described her performance as feeling rather than acting.[citation needed]

The musical sequences were filmed simultaneously with over 100 digital cameras so that multiple angles of the performance could be captured and cut together later, thus shortening the filming schedule.

Björk lies down on a stack of birch logs during the "Scatterheart" sequence. In Icelandic, Swedish, and Norwegian, "Björk" means "birch". Lars von Trier thought it would be fun to put it in the film.[citation needed]

A Swedish locomotive (owned by TÅGAB, a short line) was painted in the American Great Northern scheme for the movie, and not repainted afterward. [1]

[edit] Critical responses

Reaction to 'Dancer in the Dark was extremely mixed; for example, on The Movie Show, Margaret Pomeranz gave it 5 stars while David Stratton gave it 0 - the only time this has ever happened.

The film was praised for its stylistic innovations: Roger Ebert of the Chicago Sun Times stated that "It smashes down the walls of habit that surround so many movies. It returns to the wellsprings. It is a bold, reckless gesture."[2] and Edward Guthmann from the San Francisco Chronicle wrote "It's great to see a movie so courageous and affecting, so committed to its own differentness."[3]

However, criticism was directed at its tear-jerking storyline: Jonathan Foreman of the New York Post described the film as "meretricious fakery" and called it "so unrelenting in its manipulative sentimentality that, if it had been made by an American and shot in a more conventional manner, it would be seen as a bad joke."[4]

[edit] Awards

Dancer in the Dark premiered at the Cannes Film Festival to standing ovations and controversy[citation needed] and was awarded the Palme d'Or, along with the Best Actress award for Björk. The song "I've Seen It All" was nominated for an Oscar for best song, at the performance of which Björk wore her famous swan dress.

[edit] Nominated

  • Academy Award - Best Song (I've Seen It All - Nominated)
  • Bodil Award - Best Film (Nominated)
  • Brit Awards - Best Soundtrack (Nominated)
  • Camerimage Awards - Gold Frog Award (Nominated)
  • Chicago Film Critics Association Awards - Best Actress (Björk - Nominated)
  • Chicago Film Critics Association Awards - Best Original Score (Nominated)
  • Cinema Writers Circle Awards (Spain) - Best Foreign Film (Nominated)
  • Cesar Awards (France) - Best Foreign Film (Nominated)
  • Golden Globe Awards - Best Actress in a Film (Björk - Nominated)
  • Golden Globe Awards - Best Original Song (I've Seen It All - Nominated)
  • Golden Satellite Awards - Best Drama (Nominated)
  • Golden Satellite Awards - Best Actress, Drama (Björk - Nominated)
  • Golden Satellite Awards - Best Supporting Actress, Drama (Catherine Denevue - Nominated)

[edit] Won

[edit] Full cast

Björk: Selma Jezkova
Catherine Deneuve: Kathy
David Morse: Bill Houston
Peter Stormare: Jeff
Joel Grey: Oldrich Novy
Cara Seymour: Linda Houston
Vladica Kostic: Gene Jezkova
Jean-Marc Barr: Norman
Vincent Paterson: Samuel
Siobhan Fallon: Brenda
Zeljko Ivanek: District attorney
Udo Kier: Dr. Porkorny
Jens Albinus: Morty
Reathel Bean: Judge
Mette Berggreen: Receptionist
Lars Michael Dinesen: Defense attorney
Katrine Falkenberg: Suzan
Michael Flessas: Angry man
John Randolph Jones: Detective
Noah Lazarus: Officer of the Court.
Sheldon Litt: Visitor
Andrew Lucre: Clerk of Court
John Martinus: Chairman
Luke Reilly: New Defense Counsel
T.J. Rizzo: Boris
Stellan Skarsgård: Doctor
Sean-Michael Smith: Person in doorway
Paprika Steen: Woman on night shift
Eric Voge: Officer
Nick Wolf: Man with hood
Timm Zimmermann: Guard
Troels Asmussen: Dancer (uncredited)
Marianne Bengtsson: Dancer (uncredited)
Edvin Karlsson: Dancer (uncredited)
Anders Skovsted: Uncredited

[edit] Music

See also: Selmasongs: Music from the Motion Picture Soundtrack Dancer in the Dark

[edit] References in other media

The Finnish band The Rasmus included a song called "Dancer in the Dark" in the special edition of their 2005 album Hide from the Sun. This song is about the movie.

[edit] External links

Preceded by
Rosetta
Palme d'Or
2000
Succeeded by
The Son's Room
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