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Carl Theodor Dreyer
B: February 3, 1889, Copenhagen, Denmark
D: March 20, 1968, Copenhagen, Denmark
CARL THEODOR DREYER
FILMOGRAPHY
Though not a prolific director, or one whose films were
consistently popular with critics
nor the public, Carl Theodor Dreyer is considered one of the greatest directors
in Danish cinema. His use of compact, almost Spartan storylines combined with
austere visuals and quick, close-focus cinematography has had a substantial
influence on such later directors as Ingmar
Bergman and Robert Bresson. Orphaned early on, Dreyer's adoptive parents
were financially struggling blue-collar, deeply religious Danes. Though they met
his basic physical needs, the strict Lutheran concepts with which they raised
him would later figure prominently in his work, which was frequently centered
upon provocative explorations of psychological guilt and metaphysics. Dreyer
became a journalist in 1910 after failing to make it as a cafe pianist or a
corporate bookkeeper. With his tabloid, he wrote celebrity profiles; this helped
him connect with the entertainment industry. Two years later Dreyer was writing
titles for films from the Nordisk company, which lead him to screenwriting and
infrequent jobs editing films. He wrote 23 screenplays before directing his
first film, The President (1918), a pretentious but ultimately routine
melodrama that was neither a critical nor a box-office success. Dreyer attempted
to mimic the episodic structure of D.W. Griffith's Intolerance in his
second feature,
Leaves
from Satan's Book (1919). Like his first film, this one was considered
pretentious, but despite the film's flaws, it did contain fleeting glimpses of
his future greatness.
Following Satan's Book, Dreyer sought to escape
the financial instability of the Danish film industry and ended up making films
in Norway, Sweden, France, and Germany, but try as he might, he was never able
to escape battles with his producers and backers many who were said to have
considered Dreyer an extravagant, extremely stubborn artist. The reputation was
justified as the director considered his films works of art and doggedly refused
to cut corners. Dreyer made his first great film,
The Parson's Widow (1920) in Norway
with funds from the Swedish company, Svensk Filmindustri. The story is rife with
a psychological richness not often found in melodramas. His next film,
Mikael, a study
of a tormented artist trying to cope with his homosexual desires, was made in
Germany. This film too demonstrated Dreyer's ability to evoke realistic, highly
concentrated emotional responses from his actors.
It was in France that he made the masterpiece for which
he is best remembered,
The Passion of
Joan of Arc (1928), a powerful, imperfect chronicle of the final day in
the saint's life. It was here that Dreyer took one of Griffith's techniques, the
close-up, and created effects designed to capture every nuance of the
characters' conscious and subconscious state. This film took the director over
18 months to finish. With this film, Dreyer attempted to keep the story
historically accurate in every way: the script was based on actual trial
records, the cast wore period clothing sans make-up and jewelry, the film was
shot in perfect sequence, and elaborate, expensive sets were constructed,
including an enormous castle with sliding walls to facilitate photography.
Unfortunately, though critics adored the film (and still do, as it remains one
of the most carefully examined and acclaimed films in the history of cinema), it
was a box office flop. Due to a lengthy breach of contract suit with his French
producers over a subsequent film, Dreyer didn't make another film for five years
(though he did win the court case).
His next film, 1931's
Vampyr (his
first talkie), an exploration of the thin opaque veil between reality and the
dream world, was independently funded and utilized a non-professional cast of
actors. Though considered by many modern critics as a horror masterpiece,
critics of the day disliked the film, and the public too stayed away. Dreyer was
devastated by the two failures and did not make another film for ten years.
Instead he went back to journalism until 1942, when he attempted a comeback with
a short documentary. It was during 1943, the apex of Nazi occupation of Denmark,
that he made his next classic,
Day of Wrath.
Though the film is outwardly a chronicle of a religious witch-hunt, it contained
many subtler comparisons to the behavior of the Nazis, and Dreyer fled Denmark
for Sweden where he remained, making another film, until the war was over. Upon
his return to Denmark, he was unable to find a backer for his next film and
therefore began making government-sponsored documentaries. Ten years later he
created two more classics
Ordet (1955) and
Gertrud
(1964). When he died, Dreyer was preparing to make a film about the life of
Christ. ~ Sandra Brennan, All Movie Guide
Click
here to read the story of the original version of "The Passion of Joan of
Arc".
>> Carl
Theodor Dreyer Filmography
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