Posts Tagged ‘DOGME’

Bird Box (2018) **

Dir: Susanne Bier | Sandra Bullock, John Malkovich, Sarak Paulson, Travante Rhodes, Jacki Weaver | Sci-fi thriller | 124′

Susanne Bier is a well known as one of Denmark’s most distinguished auteurs. Her themes are universal in nature but their focus is intimate and often family-based, both on her TV and in big screen outings. As one of the original Danish Dogme pack, her drama Open Hearts brought her into the international spotlight in 2002. Bier was also the first female director to win a Golden Globe, an Academy Award, an Emmy Award and a European Film Award.

This time, to her credit, she has decided to experiment with a dystopian sci-fi drama . Structurally flawed and not particularly enjoyable, despite its starry cast, BIRDBOX is a laudable effort but not one of her best. Sandra Bullock plays Malorie, a run of the mill artist who has converted her small flat into a studio and is expecting the imminent arrival of a baby. But her ordinary life is catapulted into bizarre and tragic circumstances when a wave of unexplained mass suicides in Romania and Siberia turns the world upside down. Everywhere people display what newscasters term “psychotic behaviour” in the post-apocalyptic meltdown. Cars crash for no reason, and pedestrians wander willy nilly onto main roads, or shoot themselves in the head. To add to the weirdness of it all, Bier’s narrative jerks backwards and forwards showing Malorie’s reaction in the present to the madness that has gone before. Clearly this all resonates with a contemporary scenario where people have lost sight of their goals. This translates into a storyline where humans must protect their eyesight at all costs when outdoors, and are forced to be blindfold for fear of facing their worst nightmares.

Bullock is superbly cast exuding all the pragmatism and resilience she’s well known for (in Gravity and Speed) but for some reason she’s also looking after two children who are clearly not hers. And why the pregnancy into the bargain? The film opens well with the cataclysm but then descends into torpor in the claustrophobically awkward second act which takes place in a house where Malorie is hiding with arch misery-guts John Malkovich’s Douglas and a retired soldier (Rhodes). Later joining them is a sinister but chipper Tom Hollander. This interior strife clearly echoes what’s happening outside, and is only briefly leavened by Douglas’ discovery of a cache of booze. But even when the action moves into the forest the whole scenario is unconvincing. BIRDBOX brings nothing new to the dystopian apocalypse party, apart from the blindfolds – which are a distraction. Clearly the dark forces causing all the mayhem are inspired by Medusa’s Gorgon, but this all seems too far-fetched and strung out. Full marks for trying but let’s hope Bier returns to form in 2019. MT

STREAMING ON NETFLIX FROM 21 DECEMBER 2018

Susanne Bier

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Daughter to German and Russian Jews, Writer/Director Susanne Bier was born in Copenhagen, Denmark in 1960. She first studied art at the Bezalet Academy of Arts and Design in Jerusalem and then architecture at the Architecture Academy in London, before returning to Denmark to study as a Director at the prestigious National Film School of Denmark, graduating in 1987. Other alumni from around that time include Bille August, Lars Von Trier (1982), Lone Sherfig (1984) Anthony Dod Mantle (1989) and Thomas Vinterberg (1993).

Her graduation film helped set her on her way, winning first prize at the Munich film school festival. She followed this up with Freud Leaving Home in 1990 and Family Matters in 1993, but it was The One And Only in 1999 that proved her breakthrough, winning several gongs at the Danish Film Academy Awards and proving a great success with home audiences, breaking box office records. It also began a lasting and productive relationship with actress Paprika Steen, who went on to perform in several of her films, including her latest, Love Is All You Need.

In 1995 Trier and Vinterberg announced the Dogme ‘95 movement, based on a manifesto based very much on Francois Truffaut’s essay of 1954 concerning low budget filmmaking, saying that in a world of prohibitively high budgets, they wished only to redress the balance.

Open Hearts (2002) was Dogme film #28 and a great success internationally. It also moved Bier towards a more minimal methodology of filmmaking. The highly acclaimed Brothers (2004) and After The Wedding (2006) also helped greatly in her ascendancy, the latter being nominated for Best Foreign Film at the Academy Awards. However, like many ‘foreign’ directors before her, she stumbled with her first American offering, Things We Lost In The Fire (2007) starring Benicio Del Toro.

Bier doesn’t confine herself solely to shooting feature films, taking on shorts, commercials and music videos. Her strength lies in her ability to explore the minutiae of relationships and the cost of betrayal, pain and forgiveness. Certainly her own take on things is that she wishes to address the conflict between characters and addressing storytelling and psychology, to make emotions the undercurrent to a story.

Bier has been married twice and has two children, Gabriel and Esther. She still believes ‘family’ has been her biggest influence and that she would have never become a filmmaker without children; that they gave her a career, rather than robbing her of one.
She says she desires very intense, close, intimate relationships with everyone she is involved with. ‘That way of living definitely informs the stories I tell.”

Bier has stated in the past that ‘her Jewish heritage embedded a strong sense of family in conjunction to a sense of instability and turmoil’. As a result of her fathers need to flee to Denmark, where he met her mother and then their need to escape yet again to Sweden at the onset of the war and this has proved to be influential in her work.

Her detractors at home say that her films have become too commercial and lack artistic value, however, she believes that she has a strong ability to empathise and her long term co-writer Anders Thomas Jensen agrees, saying that she has an innate ability to put herself into her characters shoes, making her a fine filmmaker and so allowing her characters to transcend borders.

To date, she has won an astonishing 29 awards, internationally and been nominated for a further 23. Bier also remains though the only Danish female to be nominated for two Academy Awards, winning Best Foreign Film with her 2010 offering, In A Better World.
This year she was invited to be a member of the Berlinale Jury.

FILMOGRAPHY

•   Freud’s Leaving Home (Freud flyttar hjemmefran…) (1991)
•   Family Matters (Det bli’r i familien) (1994)
•   Like It Never Was Before (Pensionat Oskar) (1995)
•   Credo (Sekten) (1997)
•   The One and Only (Den eneste ene) (1999)
•   Once in a Lifetime (Livet är en schlager) (2000)
•   Open Hearts (Elsker dig for evigt) (2002)
•   Brothers (Brødre) (2004)
•   After the Wedding (Efter brylluppet) (2006)
•   Things We Lost in the Fire (2007)
•   In a Better World (Hævnen) (2010)
•   Love is All You Need (Den skaldede frisør) (2012)
•   Serena (2013)

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