A numbing, nearly three-hour musical.
Dancer in the Dark (1999)
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Reviews Counted:111
Fresh:75
Rotten:36
Average Rating:6.6/10
Consensus: Dancer in Dark can be grim, dull, and difficult to watch, but even so, it has a powerful and moving performance from Bjork and is something quite new and visionary.
Theatrical Release:Sep 23, 2000 Wide
Box Office: $891,547
Synopsis: The final installment in Lars von Trier's Golden Heart trilogy (which includes BREAKING THE WAVES and THE IDIOTS), DANCER IN THE DARK takes the director's original blend of heightened... The final installment in Lars von Trier's Golden Heart trilogy (which includes BREAKING THE WAVES and THE IDIOTS), DANCER IN THE DARK takes the director's original blend of heightened pseudorealism, fabricated melodrama, and the priciples of the Dogme 95 genre to a dangerously intense level. The story concerns Selma (Björk), a Czech immigrant living in 1964 Washington State with her 12-year-old son, Gene (Vladan Kostic). On the verge of blindness, Selma spends her days working in a factory, as well as performing other odd jobs, in order to save up enough money to pay for an operation that will cure Gene of the same disease. To pass the time, Selma fantasizes that her own life is a musical, one in which her friends join her in sweeping song-and-dance routines. After her neighbor Bill (David Morse) discovers Selma's hidden savings and steals them from her, she is forced to perform an act of salvation that will condemn her forever. As the innocent Selma, Björk is one of the most fragile and heartbreaking presences the screen has ever seen. Her unbearably moving performance is enough to keep the viewer mesmerized throughout, even amid the story gaps and inconsistencies. Featuring compassionate supporting turns by Catherine Deneuve and Peter Stormare, DANCER IN THE DARK is an unrelenting gut punch that will have sympathetic audiences quivering with uncontrollable emotion. [More]
Starring: Björk, Catherine Deneuve, Jean-Marc Barr, David Morse
Starring: Björk, Catherine Deneuve, Jean-Marc Barr, David Morse, Stellan Skarsgaard, Peter Stormare, Udo Kier, Cara Seymour
Director: Lars von Trier
Director: Lars von Trier
Screenwriter: Lars von Trier
Producer: Vibeke Windelov
Studio: Fine Line Features
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Reviews for Dancer in the Dark
[Von Trier] manages to generate big emotions out of meager material, mainly thanks to the performances he gets from his actors.
If this movie were ever to open on Broadway, they could hold the opening and closing night parties simultaneously.
Strange, cerebral, immensely interesting and weirdly, thoroughly distancing, Dancer in the Dark is a movie like they used to make 'em.
Von Trier is asking not that you take a leap of faith; he's asking you to hold his hand while he jumps off the bridge.
Rarely is Dancer in the Dark pleasant to endure (pleasure doesn't seem to be a goal of the von Trier oeuvre), but you'll do it, spellbound.
Seeing it, one does get some sense that the Danish Emperor of Film is wearing no clothes.
Latest News for Dancer in the Dark
July 22, 2009:
RT Interview: Lars von Trier on Antichrist
If you go down to the woods today... Well, just don't. Danish provocateur Lars von Trier's arthouse psychohorror Antichrist is the most controversial film of the year -- and the... More...
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