An
apparent protegé of Gilles Jacob, von Trier has
had his entire production of feature films screened in
the official programme at Cannes from his debut,
Forbrydelsens Element (The Element Of Crime)
in 1984, via Epidemic (1987) and Europa
(1991) to Breaking The Waves, which won
the Grand Prix in 1996. Now he is back with a film that
is being marketed as the Millennium Movie.
In
the meantime, if you're put on hold while trying to get
a telephone call through to his company, Zentropa Entertainments,
you will hear von Trier crooning his way through the Peter
Skellern classic, You're A Lady, taken from
the musical video for the first Dogme film, Idioterne
(The Idiots), a Cannes entry in 1998. For fans
of the controversial filmmaker (or even pop history),
this memorable rendition is also available on a CD: "Von
Trier And The Idiot All Stars."
Otherwise,
though, von Trier would not claim any sense of music.
"I only listen to ABBA," he says. Yet for two years, music
by Icelandic pop star Björk has been constantly on
his mind, while making his $15 million musical Dancer
In The Dark, with the former Sugarcube in the
lead as a woman pursuing her personal vision of the American
dream.
Originally
signed solely to compose the score for the film, Björk
makes her feature debut as Selma, a Czech immigrant and
single mother working at a factory in rural America. She
harbours a sad secret: she is losing her eyesight from
a hereditary
disease, and her 10-year-old son stands to suffer the
same fate. Alongside her is French legend Catherine Deneuve,
who came to von Trier of her own accord having
seen Breaking The Waves, Deneuve learned
about the new project and wrote a letter to the Danish
director, saying that she would be available for a part.
She joined the production almost immediately, and principal
photography began in April 1999 on Swedish locations.
With
a cast also including David Morse, Peter Stormare and Joel
Gray, Dancer In The Dark is described by von
Trier as "a big film, a musical melodrama colliding with
reality." In the end Selma makes the mother's ultimate sacrifice
giving her life to pay for expensive surgery
which will save her son's sight.
"When
shooting I felt a bit like Albert Speer, who was able to
control everything," says von Trier, who announced his retirement
from the back-to-basics Dogme movement last year. "We filmed
one special dance routine, moved the cameras once, and ended
up with 120 hours of footage from the same scene. It is
definitely the most difficult production I have ever undertaken.
"I
have always loved film musicals," he continues, "and looking
for a new challenge, Dancer In The Dark came
just at the right moment. But being sort of ignorant on
music, I had never
heard Björk's work before we started looking for a
composer. Now I have, and I am very fond of it. Receiving
the letter from Deneuve that she was interested in working
with me obviously added to the thrill."
Produced
by von Trier's regular collaborator, Vibeke Windeløv,
Dancer In The Dark was packaged by Zentropa
Entertainments (which he owns with Peter Aalbæk Jensen),
and co-financed by Cinematograph (Norway), Memfis (Sweden),
Pain Unlimited (Germany) and Liberator (France), supported
by Scandinavian film funds and Eurimages. Sweden
stood in for Washington DC locations, leaving only second-unit
work for the US, and all studio photography was shot at
Filmbyen, 40,000 square miles of former military barracks
at Avedøre outside Copenhagen turned into a production
centre, where the dance sequences were shot simultaneously
wuth 100 fixed Sony PD100 cameras.
Able to screen only 45 minutes of the feature at last
year's Mifed, with von Trier still half way through the
editing, Peter Aalbæk Jensen Zentropa Entertainment's
co-owner and ceo decided not to go on with presales
there, but to wait for the film's presentation on the
Côte d'Azur in order to demand a higher price. "Buyers
go home. Save your money
for Cannes," he advertised. "I
have never before refused that much money," added sales
director Thomas Mai, of Trust Film Sales, representing
the film in Milan. But Dancer In The Dark
has so far sold the US (Fine Line Features, via Good Machine,
for a reported $5 million), the UK, Germany and Scandinavia,
besides already being licensed to France, Italy and the
Benelux through co-production agreements.
Jørn
Rossing Jensen.
|


| Cast
|
Björk,
Catherine Deneuve, David Morse, Peter Stormare, Joel Gray
|
| Scr |
Lars
von Trier |
| Prod |
Vibeke
Windeløv, Peter Aalbæk Jensen (Exec prod)
|
|
Prod co |
Zentropa Entertainments, Trust Film, Film I Väst,
Liberator Productions, with Pain Unlimited, Cinematograph,
What Else?, Icelandic Film Corporation, Blind Spot Pictures |
| Running
Time |
139
min
|
| Int'l
Sales |
Trust
Film Sales |
|
|