Average Rating: 9.4/10
Reviews Counted: 12
Fresh: 12 | Rotten: 0
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Critic Reviews: 1
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Average Rating: 4.4/5
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With his masterful Ordet (aka The Word, [1955]), legendary Danish filmmaker Carl Theodor Dreyer examines the conflict between internalized personal faith and organized religion. Dreyer sets the drama in a conservative, super-pious Danish town, where widower Morten Borgen (Henrik Malberg) -- the father of three boys -- cuts against the grain of the community with his constant heretical doubt. One of his sons, Mikkel Borgen (Emil Hass Christensen), is entangled in an interfaith romance with a
Jan 1, 1954 Wide
All Critics (14) | Top Critics (1) | Fresh (14) | Rotten (0) | DVD (7)
Both emotionally and intellectually the picture is hypnotic, and some portions will nail the spectator to his seat.
Top CriticTragedy strikes, and petty denominational squabbles disintegrate in Dreyer's sublime synthesis of humanistic and textual faith, a vision of purity and clarity.
Ordet's faithfulness is both old fashioned and invigorating
Reminiscent of Ingmar Bergman's spare style when exploring similar themes (eg The Seventh Seal), Dryer's work is disciplined and focused, rather like a Jesuit, really.
This is an overwhelming emotional and intellectual experience, thanks both to its subject matter and its austere yet potent presentation.
Dreyer is digging deeper than these slogans ["institutional religion" versus "personalized faith"], to the regions of mystery where Johannes's mind was lost.
A moving work of great intelligence, compassion and sensitivity.
A rare work about spiritual life and the conflicts of earthly bodies and heavenly desires that doesn't denigrate or simplify religion despite the flawed nature of the characters and of the institution of religion itself.
In a little danish farming community, the word of Jesus Christ is debated and preached between rival classes of townfolk. Although all are christian, the debate concerns who the "real" christians are and which are truly following the word of Jesus as it should be followed. On one side of the feud is the Borgen farm,
June 27, 2011Super Reviewer
Could very well be the saddest movie I've ever seen, but at the same time uplifting and inspiring. Like most Carl Dreyer films it takes a while to get to the point, but the trip is so worth it. The film is beautifully shot, with slow fluid camera movement that totally sucks you in. And like most of Dreyer's films, the
May 23, 2007Super Reviewer
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