Cameron Birnie uncovers some dusty classics and hidden
gems from the local video store.
The Five Obstructions (2005) is a playful and profound
documentary about a pitched battle between two giants of
Danish cinema, Lars von Trier and Jorgen Leth.
The film's central concept is like something lifted from
reality television and repackaged for film buffs.
Rather than being forced to swim with sharks or to eat live
beetles, Leth is goaded by von Trier, his friend and former
Danish Film Institute student, into remaking his seminal
1960s short film The Perfect Human five times, each time
adhering to a fiendishly challenging set of ‘obstructions'
posed by von Trier.
In the first of the five obstructions, Leth, famous for his
long, uninterrupted, carefully observed takes, is told to
remake the film in Cuba, with no set, and to ensure that no
shot lasts for longer than 12 frames (half a second), a cut
rate that would make even the most hyperactive MVT director
take pause.
When Leth returns with a film of fluid, kinetic beauty, von
Trier's resolve as a torturer hardens. "The 12 frames were a
gift!" he says, before sending Leth off on his next odyssey,
this time to ‘the most miserable place on earth'.
Von Trier is the enfant terrible of Danish cinema, a director
famous both for his disregard for conventional cinematic
rules (a musical-melodrama shot on shaky digital camcorders
and ending with an execution, anybody?) and his tendency to
devise fiendish rules and restrictions of his own.
The Idiots was filmed according to the ten ‘dogmas' of the
Dogme 95 manifesto, which called for the abandonment of
artificial lighting, set design, musical soundtracks and
tripods, among other things.
Dogville and Manderlay were set in imaginary villages and
shot in bare warehouses, complete with the mimed opening and
shutting of doors.
Leth, by contrast, is bound by his own code of artistic
conduct, what he calls the ‘ethics of the observer',
requiring him to maintain a distance from his subjects and
capture reality as it unfolds.
So to watch the games the filmmakers play with one another is
to witness a war of ideologies. "Would you film a child dying
in a refugee camp and add the words from The Perfect Human?"
asks von Trier.
The film also offers a fascinating glimpse into the personal
lives of the two filmmakers and the relationship between
them.
Leth and von Trier both suffer from melancholy and
depression, and an understated but ever-present theme in the
film is the fact that Leth has been living a depressive and
lonely life in Haiti as the honourary Danish consul, having
retreated from the world of filmmaking entirely, and that von
Trier is taking on the role of therapist here.
If von Trier is a therapist, he is seemingly from the ‘primal
scream' school.
He has been described as sadistic by at least one of his
leading ladies in the past, and his unabashed goal here is to
break Leth, so that he can remake himself.
Will von Trier succeed in his goal of forcing Leth to ‘move
from the perfect to the human?' I'll save you the pleasure of
deciding this for yourself as you watch the fifth and most
remarkable ‘obstruction'.
If you are interested in the ways that artists adapt, react
and respond to adversity, weaving straw into gold, then this
will be a real and rare pleasure.
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