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Breaking the Waves
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Directed by Lars von Trier
With Breaking The Waves, director Lars von Trier fashions an often disturbing tale of the singular power of love. Bess (the Oscar-nominated Emily Watson) is a naïve, borderline simple young woman who lives in a Scottish coastal town ruled by the religious doctrine of its council of elders. Recovering from a mental breakdown caused by the death of her brother, Bess marries a rough yet compassionate and attentive oil rig worker named Jan (Stellan Skarsgård). For a brief time, the couple enjoys peaceful wedded bliss, with the worldly Jan introducing Bess to the mysteries of sex. Jan must soon return to his job on the rig, however, where he is paralyzed from the neck down in a freak accident. Bess' emotional trauma over Jan's injury turns into obsession as she prays to God for his recovery and offers to do anything to have her husband back whole. Jan, constantly medicated and profoundly depressed, asks Bess to have sex with other men and tell him about it, thinking this will allow her to return to a normal life. Bess, on the other hand, sees it as an expression of her devotion to Jan that even God won't be able to ignore. Bess' resultant downward spiral leads to a finale of both tragedy and spirituality. Breaking the Waves is widely regarded as one of the most distinctive European movies of the 1990s, marking von Trier's movement toward his influential Dogma 95 school of filmmaking, which emphasizes realistic situations of contemporary life, filmed without background music and with a hand-held, restlessly moving camera. ~ Don Kaye, All Movie Guide
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SpoutBlogSpoutBlog 10 More ’90s Indies to Franchise
by SpoutBlog in SpoutBlog on spout.com
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"Now that we know, courtesy of Stu at Defamer, that Werner Herzog’s remake of Abel Ferrara’s Bad Lieutenant is not so much a r " [More]
paulpaul Re: Lars Von Trier
by paul in I'm watching, I'm wincing.
loved it.
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"I was also really blown away by the first 45 minutes of Dogville. I felt like I was watching a genius director at work. Then, as you say, he cut the ground out from beneath me, again and again. With Dogville and Breaking the Waves, I got to the point where I started to wonder why Von Trier kept allowing his characters to be brutalized again and again. When is enough? I " [More]
TheWorkingDeadTheWorkingDead Re: Top 5 Tear Jerking Scenes
by TheWorkingDead in Top 5
"Some of these have already been mentioned, but screw it, these are the five I can think of at the moment(not, possibly, the Top 5).Dancer in the Dark: Many, many moments, as has been pointed out before. Two standouts; the I Have Seen it All song, particularly the line about her hypothetical grandson, and the ending, with her acapella rendition of The New World. An ending that actually made me " [More]
lukasblulukasblu Re: suggestions?
by lukasblu in indie films
"Any movie by director lars von trier;the ones i have seen and like are Breaking the Waves (1996),Dancer in the Dark (2000), Dogville (20 " [More]
mitch-4mitch-4 Re: Antonia Bird Re: Top 5 Mov ...
by mitch-4 in Filmspotting
"Hi there, Dana! Speaking of Antonia :-), I think you were not there at our mutual friend G's party when another guest and I got into it over Breaking the Waves and Marleen Goren's [More]
RisseladaRisselada Re: New missing film inquiry
by Risselada in missing a film
"NEVERMIND!The answer is Breaking the Waves. " [More]
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Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
loved it.
There was never any doubt that Lars von Trier could create an atmosphere in his films. The Element of Crime, Zentropa, and The Kingdom all proved that few filmmakers could fashion a visually distinctive world as well as von Trier; but with Breaking the Waves, he vaulted to the forefront of the serious filmmakers of the 1990s. It's a highly original, highly challenging story about love and faith featuring two remarkably difficult yet successful performances from the stars, Emily Watson (nominated for an Oscar in her screen debut ) and Stellan Skarsgård. Von Trier brings his unique visual style, here dominated by vertiginous hand-held camera movements that reportedly made some viewers physically ill, and makes it part of a complementary moral and spiritual complexity. The stylized documentary feel of von Trier's Dogma 95 film movement (though much praise for the grainy monochrome must go to noted German cinematographer Robby Müller) serves both what we are seeing and how closely we are drawn to the plight of the characters. So much is tackled here, with such a commingling of romantic vision and postmodern technique, that it seems almost impossible to relate this visionary yet perversely old-fashioned movie to other movies of its time. It has the sweep and eloquence of a grand opera, and the emotional payoff to go with it. ~ Brendon Hanley, All Movie Guide
 

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