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The Five Obstructions (2004)
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Reviews Counted:14
Fresh:13
Rotten:1
Average Rating:8.1/10
Consensus: Both an intriguing intellectual exercise and an amusing look at the contrasts between the two filmmakers.
Theatrical Release:May 26, 2004 Limited
Synopsis: With THE FIVE OBSTRUCTIONS, notoriously mischievous director Lars von Trier performs yet another cinematic experiment. This time around, the Danish prankster tries to outwit his mentor, director... With THE FIVE OBSTRUCTIONS, notoriously mischievous director Lars von Trier performs yet another cinematic experiment. This time around, the Danish prankster tries to outwit his mentor, director Jorgen Leth, forcing him to remake his classic 1967 short, "The Perfect Human," five different times, with a series of increasingly outlandish guidelines. His goal is to break down the abnormally stable Leth, teaching him a valuable life lesson in the process. In the first film, von Trier sends Leth to Cuba and sets his first seemingly insurmountable rule: make a film that consists of shots that are no longer than twelve frames at a time. Miraculously, Leth uses his forced limitations to create a beautiful work, which obviously irks von Trier. Next up, von Trier challenges Leth to return to Bombay--which he calls the "most wretched place on Earth"--in order to confront some demons from his past. Once again, the clever mentor rises to the challenge. Frustrated and sensing defeat, von Trier's next challenge is deceptively simple: Leth must remake his film with no limitations whatsoever. He travels to Brussels and succeeds once again. After a foray into animation, von Trier creates the final obstruction, a film in which von Trier admits defeat and pays tribute to his mentor. THE FIVE OBSTRUCTIONS is a thoughtful, entertaining meditation on the filmmaking process. [More]
Starring: Lars von Trier, Jorgen Leth
Starring: Lars von Trier, Jorgen Leth
Director: Lars von Trier, Jorgen Leth
Director: Lars von Trier, Jorgen Leth
Story: Lars von Trier
Producer: Carsten Holst
Studio: Koch Lorber Films
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Reviews for The Five Obstructions
A film like this has a limited audience, I suppose, but for that audience it offers a rare fascination.
For those who treasure not only watching the intricate challenges of filmmaking but also feeling the thrill of tomfoolery and sharing the demonic joy of psychological twists, Obstructions is enthralling.
In this enjoyable if trivial battle between von Trier's psychodrama theatricality and Leth's cool formalism, it's ultimately the viewer who comes out the winner.
Part of what hooks you to this movie is how Leth outsmarts his taskmaster, and how the two men have divergent, almost incompatible aesthetic ideals.
In only 90 minutes it encourages you to reexamine the nature of cinema, the sources of creativity, the unexpected joys of the unanticipated moment. And it couldn't be more fun to watch.
A special auteurist treat that's easier to enjoy than to describe or categorize.
A movie that's so eager and playful and inspired that it made me a von Trier believer again.
It's a game of cinematic Survivor that takes on broader meaning, exploring film as a mode of self-expression and the latent insecurity that drives artists to deliver works of greatness.
Leth leaves the viewer both exhilarated and maybe even optimistic about the capacity of human intelligence and creativity.
Watching The Five Obstructions is at once like witnessing two chess masters playing dominoes and like spying on a series of therapy sessions.
An essay on art as a matter of solving problems posed by a capricious deity -- that is, an exposé of von Trier's own method, both of making a movie and directing actors.
Hardly conventional entertainment, but seeing what happens next provides much of the fun in this far-from-academic exercise.
| Tomatometer Percentage | Movie |
|---|---|
| 15% 15% | The Ugly Truth |
| 98% 98% | Up |
| 36% 36% | G.I. Joe: The Rise of … |
| 52% 52% | The Taking of Pelham 1… |
| 45% 45% | Ice Age: Dawn of the D… |
| Tomatometer Percentage | Movie |
|---|---|
| 36% 36% | Angels & Demons |
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| 25% 25% | Four Christmases |
| 45% 45% | Shorts |
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