Lars
von Trier on
Making Dancer in the Dark |
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It
sounded so simple, to do a musical. Its an idea Id always
had. But who knows how to make a musical? I often try to go back
to find the fascination I had as a child when I saw musicals on
television, the ones with Gene Kelly. They were always very appealing
and I thought that maybe I could recreate some of that feeling.
I dont see musicals very often anymore but then, I saw them
loads of times. Of course, my parents were communists and they thought
that all musicals were American rubbish
I suppose
that musicals are part of the family of melodrama but the ones I
saw as a child were never really dangerous. You didnt cry.
Musicals are like operettas; theyre characterized by lightness.
As a genre, they dont demand much of you - almost nothing.
The first musicals I saw were very light. Then along came a fantastic
one, West Side Story, that was more like a dramatic story.
The
difference between an opera and an operetta is that the heavy stuff
is in the opera. West Side Story is more of an opera story
than, say, Singing in the Rain where Debbie Reynolds
drama is that she almost loses a career
or does she get a
career? Whatever. Its normally smaller things that happen
in a musical. What I wanted to achieve with Dancer in the Dark is that you take things as seriously as you do in an opera. Some
years ago, people really cried at operas. I think its a skill
to be able to find such emotion in something so stylized. I would
love to feel that much for someone whos been killed with a
cardboard sword
Im
not particularly proud of the little tricks Ive used for the
musical numbers in Dancer in the Dark
I like the idea
that Selma has these fantasies or this ability to hear music in
everyday sounds, but I am not very proud that we didnt dare
to make it cleaner and just allow them to sing for no reason. The
problem is that when the music suddenly pours down from the sky,
you have a tendency to do like they do in 'The Muppet Show', where
everyone looks up to see where all the violins are located. That
takes some of the pain and the danger away from the whole thing.
I wanted the emotion and I wanted to communicate that emotion so
we used this little trick and I hope it works.
This
film is put together from two shapes: the musical scenes
and some almost documentary scenes. I thought it would be interesting
to put the documentary style up against the musical but I believe
that I act from admiration for the way musicals are Im
not trying to subvert or destroy anything. Im trying to make
it richer by somehow importing true emotion. It is such a beautiful
cocktail, emotion and music. Also, I think that to take something
like musicals seriously is interesting. Gene Kelly did it to some
degree and again, West Side Story did it. Most musicals exist
only to entertain but I think they can contain so much more.
The
technique of using a hand-held camera and video has been extended
to the musical scenes to keep the random effect, a live
quality. By using a lot of fixed cameras instead of staging a scene
for one camera you should be able NOT to control the scene. You
put up a lot of cameras and you get some gifts, in the same way
you do when you work with a hand-held camera. If you want to bring
the qualities of the looser way of filmmaking we used
in Breaking the Waves and The Idiots to the dance,
I think this was the way to start. Its not perfected in any
way; this was kind of a first stab at it but the 100 cameras enabled
us to get shots that we wouldnt have had if wed used
a storyboard, some golden moments. We actually could
have used a lot more cameras we had 100; we could have used
100 more. What the technique has proved is that its a cheap
way to achieve relatively high production values. In one scene,
we danced for two days using 100 cameras. If wed had one camera
and a storyboard, it would have taken two weeks.
Early
on in my career if I had made a musical, I would have made it in
a very traditional way with a lot of tracking shots and crane shots;
its logical, thats how to make image and music work
together. But now, I have a tendency to put down rules for myself
so I thought, No, lets go in the opposite direction
and use only fixed cameras. The idea was to get more gifts
and to have less control. Its like a transmission or a live
performance, not something filmed. If you watch a concert, somebody
on a stage singing for example, you get closer because it hasnt
been put together afterwards. Perhaps you cant see the difference,
but you can feel it. In film, people have a tendency not
to like direct transmission because they think its like television
or theatre. But the direction I have moved in for some time is actually
more in that line. The best thing would have been if we could have
done all of the song and dance numbers live and then lived with
the mistakes. Björk had a very good idea in the beginning that
the songs should be performed and recorded live but unfortunately
we couldnt pull it off. The logistics of it turned out to
be too difficult.
The
style of the music is the result of a collision between me and Björk.
Shes the one who knows about music and the film is about a
woman who likes the same musicals as I liked back then. The biggest
problem when youre making a musical is, of course, to decide
what music youre going to put in and I had absolutely no idea.
Thats where Björk came in and I like the music she created
very much. Some of it I had to learn to like but I did, very much,
and its a big part of the film. I couldnt have asked
for a better performer in any way. The day before we started to
shoot, I realized there was something Id forgotten to do and
that was to screen test Björk. But she gives an incredible
performance and its not acted, its felt.
This
collision between cultures and people and different approaches is
what makes films interesting. Catherine Deneuve hired herself
she wrote me a letter and asked if she could have a part and I said,
"Of course!" It seemed logical to offer her the part of
Björks partner, the other half of this very
strange pair and I like them together. Although musicals are an
American thing, there are some European ones and I knew the ones
Catherine Deneuve starred in. To a degree, I was inspired by some
of the scenes in those films.
Dancer
in the Dark is set in America because thats where musicals
come from but also because its a place Ive never been
to and will probably never visit because I dont go on airplanes.
Its a kind of mythological country for me. We shot in Sweden
and places that could look like America, and that may be more interesting
than actually going to America. Im always reminded of Kafkas Amerika. He had never been there and in the first pages of
the novel, when he sails into the harbor of New York, he describes
the Statue of Liberty carrying a big sword
I always thought
that was quite poetic.
I think
that most people in Denmark find the death penalty very foreign.
Im not saying that Danish people are more humane than others,
just that its a tradition foreign to Scandinavians. Punishment
altogether is illogical but I suppose you have to have punishments
if a society is going to work. The death penalty doesnt seem
like a punishment, however, its more like revenge and its
dangerous to allow the state to have anything to do with revenge.
Im deeply against the death penalty. On the other hand, execution
scenes are Gods gift to directors. Theyre very efficient.
If youre going to be a martyr you have to die
Selmas
execution is a part of the melodrama, that and her blindness. There
wasnt any blindness in the first script I sent to Björk
but then I saw this beautiful cartoon, a Warner Brothers cartoon
from the 1930s, extremely cleverly done. A policeman in New York
finds a doll and takes it to a woman he is in love with to give
to her daughter. The little girl is sitting on the stairs playing
with the doll and she drops it. When she goes to pick it up, she
taps about on the ground without looking down thats
all you see and you understand that shes blind. Its
extremely effective, very refined.
The
whole idea is that the little girl has never seen her mother, shes
never seen the city and there are a lot of sounds around her. Its
actually quite close to the story of Dancer in the Dark.
The child imagines that the doll comes to life and takes her around
to see all these things. She imagines that the sound of the subway
is a roller-coaster and there are flowers everywhere which of course
isnt true because its actually a slum in New York. And
then she imagines that she sees her mother
very melodramatic
and very beautiful.
I think
that the more I work, the less my own person is involved. If you
really work with a character, with an actor, its as if you
were making a documentary. You dont design something, you investigate something that is already there. Because it isnt
my person and since it isnt only about things that happen
in my twisted little brain, perhaps the work becomes more accessible.
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