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HOLIDAYS & EVENTS



Dogville
review by Jeffrey Overstreet | posted 3/26/2004




Dogville

Our rating:

Your rating:  

MPAA rating: R
(for violence and sexual content)



Theater release:
March 26, 2004
by Lions Gate Films

Directed by: Lars von Trier

Runtime: 2 hours 57 minutes

Cast: Nicole Kidman (Grace), Harriet Andersson (Gloria), Lauren Bacall (Ma Ginger), Paul Bettany (Tom Edison), Chloe Sevigny (Liz Henson), John Hurt (Narrator)

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There is an unforgettable scene in Dogville. It is unconventional, risky, unsettling, and it sums up writer/director Lars von Trier's rage against human hard-heartedness. In a wordless moment, the camera, the actors, the stage and the silence offer us a sobering observation. All that comes before it has set the stage for this moment, when the movie makes its chilling revelation.

Like Jesus' parable of the Good Samaritan, Dogville tells a simplistic fable of man who takes care of a stranger while others abuse and take advantage of her. Alongside its biblical references, there are echoes of Greek tragedy, Mark Twain, Nathaniel Hawthorne, and Flannery O'Connor. With its 1930s Colorado mountain town setting and the pleasant voice of its narrator (John Hurt in a brilliant unseen performance), the film's most obvious allusions are to Thornton Wilder's celebrated play Our Town.

Von Trier is ambitious to place his story in contrast to such essential mythologies. His films have always had an air of self-importance and indulgence. And yet, while his bombastic style would make Beethoven blush, it is hard to deny his visionary talent. With each film, he brings a sledgehammer to filmmaking conventions. Audiences are compelled as much by his innovations as they are by his willingness to wrestle difficult questions, no matter who gets hurt. Dogville, while not his most original story, becomes the first feature in which the ideas he presents make worthwhile the ordeal of sitting through it.

Nicole Kidman as Grace
Nicole Kidman as Grace

Again, von Trier has chosen a brilliant cast, led by Nicole Kidman. In Breaking the Waves, Emily Watson had the role that made her an international star. Bjork deserved the awards she won for her uncannily heartfelt performance in Dancer in the Dark. Kidman's work, while not as complex, is memorable as well.

She plays Grace Mulligan, a beautiful fugitive sneaking up Dogville's mountain to escape gun-wielding gangsters. She doesn't get far. Moses the vigilant watchdog reveals her to the local philosopher, Tom Edison (Master and Commander's Paul Bettany).

Already you have noticed the "loaded" character names—Grace, Moses, Tom Edison. Abandoning the realism of his previous morality plays, von Trier makes these characters mere sketches, types that lend themselves readily to metaphor. The farmer represents hard-working folk. The truck driver, industry. The shopkeeper, capitalism.

Sensing her innocence, Tom takes Grace into his care. But it's not just charity. Tom wants to teach his town a lesson. "I've got nothing to offer them," Grace protests. He disagrees: "No, I think you've got plenty to offer Dogville." Upon a second viewing of the film, that line becomes positively chilling.

Dogville seems a fine community at first glance—"Reserved but friendly, not without curiosity," says the narrator. But you can't trust this narrator. Von Trier, like David Lynch, zooms past the quaint exterior to reveal the evil at work behind closed doors. Dogville's insular community is populated with self-protective liars who behave with contempt and defensiveness when strangers come to town. Tom sees Grace's arrival as an opportunity to expose the selfishness of the townsfolk.




Reader Reviews
Your Rating:  

helga   Posted: April 25, 2009 2:42 PM
This is one of the most powerful movies I have ever seen. It is so rich that one could spend days and weeks pondering its many meanings. It lingers on powerfully. It is not just about the US, it is universal. To appreciate this film one has to be willing to look squarely at one's own shadow, the dark side of human nature, what we are capable of given the "right" circumstances. That's where the richness lies. And the people of Dogville missed their opportunity to look at the depth of their own depravity and redeem themselves.

Paul   Posted: April 06, 2009 6:05 AM
Grace was the rainbow--the covenant with man. Never again, God said. Is arrogance a part of this setup? Is there evidence of arrogance in Grace? Where does arrogance lie? With whom? How easily you answer these questions will most likely determine how well you'll tolerate and like this film. Just how far will you open your mind?

Don Wyatt   Posted: March 30, 2009 10:16 PM
What was the point of this film? As it seems to glorify violence of all kinds? and says to everyone this is all you have inside you, be warned. How depressing can you be.? I say it merits a no star rating unless you lust for violence.


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