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Breaking the Waves (1996)

Breaking the Waves, a powerful fable from Danish director Lars von Trier (Zentropa, The Kingdom) is as daunting as it is satisfying. The satisfaction comes from von Trier's audacious and ever-deepening sense for filmmaking — Breaking the Waves is his most ambitious and skillfully drawn narrative so far, and it offers the pleasure of undertaking an uncertain journey, unsure of where it might all end. That's also what's daunting. Breaking the Waves is epic in scope, careering wildly from warm and fleshy love story to grim tragedy to something else entirely over the course of its 158 minutes. It's a film that demands your rapt attention bit by bit, plumbing ever-deeper corners of the soul and plunging at one point into the abyss. Finally, once it's over, it will return day by day to haunt its audiences. This is seriously nervy filmmaking.
It's not long before Jan is called back to sea, and Bess lives in dread of the day that he will leave. She can't help herself — just before Jan's airborne, she cries out in pain and rushes the helicopter, pulling the hatch open to take one last look at her beloved. In another scene, Bess waits all day beside a country road in the rain, under cover of the telephone booth where she has arranged to receive Jan's phone call. The erotically charged conversation is testimony to her newfound comfort and maturity. She's a woman who takes the most profound and life-affirming satisfaction in sexual pleasure, and she prays to God for Jan's swift return. The prayer is answered — Jan is clocked on the head by a piece of heavy equipment and returns to the village on a stretcher, paralyzed.
Bess blames herself, believing that her prayers are responsible for Jan's horrible misfortune. Upset that he can't make love to her, Jan instructs his wife not to dress in tight clothing, lest he be too aware of her body, out of reach. And then he tells her she must have sex with other men so that she can return to his bed and recount her lovemaking to him — in this way, he insists, he can be reminded of her sexuality and his otherwise worthless life can be saved.
We get the distinct feeling that while Bess is nothing but sincere in her devotion to her husband, Jan's motivations are at best misguided and at worst downright malevolent. Ostensibly, he's trying to give her life back to her, but how could he be unaware of the pain his demands cause her? Moreover, how can he stand to direct his beloved to debase herself by, say, sitting next to a 50-year-old stranger at the back of a bus and giving him a hand job? Or by making a clumsy, naked pass at Jan's doctor? Still, Jan's condition is seen to improve as Bess puts out, and that's reason enough for her to clothe herself in the borrowed trappings of a cheap whore.
Is this beginning to sound ridiculous, like the thinly constructed plot of a softcore porn movie on late night cable TV? Von Trier dares to walk that line, and such is his skill and conviction that he staves off the inherent tawdriness of such a concept and invests it with a fierce gravity. Stylistically, Breaking the Waves has a lot in common with the director's television project, The Kingdom. In his breakthrough, Zentropa, von Trier used every optical trick in the book to create a highly stylized world — replete with rear-projection effects and process shots — that was more memorable for its visual impact than for its overreaching characterization and narrative. But The Kingdom was a marvel, a four-and-a-half hour ghost story that seemed to pass in little more than a moment. Propelled by a fitful documentary film style and a picture drained of most color and detail, The Kingdom's supernatural pretensions were validated and even amplified by a mood that felt like cinema verité.
Breaking the Waves takes greater risks, and cinematographer
Robby Müller (Paris, Texas) was obviously directed to
take a similar approach. The film's bleak look is reminiscent of The
Kindom's — both were shot on film, transferred to video and
then back to film again, which leeched out color and detail and imbued
the image with an odd, nearly ethereal quality — but where The
Kingdom took place mostly within the institutional confines of
a single building, Breaking the Waves allows that highly processed,
unnatural patina to infect a village, a countryside, and indeed the
whole world. In this bleak context, Müller, whose extensive work
with Wim Wenders is justly admired, showcases the fine naturalistic
portrayals of the characters peopling that dim vista. If the bleak imagery
represents von Trier's intellectual guidance, in the rhythm of the camerawork
and the editing we can feel the movie's heartbeat.
And when Mueller's camera hovers for long moments in front of Emily
Watson's face, it finds the movie's soul. Hers is one of those rare
performances that it's impossible to overpraise. The relationship between
Watson and the camera is reminiscent of nothing so much as the cold
and exacting gaze that delineates Renee Falconetti's monumental performance
in Carl Theodor Dreyer's The Passion of Joan of Arc (perhaps
significantly; like Saint Joan, Bess is more or less accused of heresy).
The character of Bess becomes inarguably flesh, and Watson inhabits
that flesh with preternatural aplomb. With wide, round eyes and slim
lips the dark shade of blood, there's nothing vague about Watson's emoting.
Her feelings are communicated with a precision that can be charming,
as when those lips curl near the cheek to puff a strand of hair out
of her eyes, or wrenching, as when her shriek suddenly pierces the movie's
uncommon quiet. Her marriage has transformed her suddenly from virgin
into a woman of full sexuality whose very essence seems saturated with
pleasure by the act of lovemaking. (Helena Bonham Carter, who could
hardly be so unspoiled a presence, reportedly won the role of Bess and
then turned it down.) Even when she's carrying on a two-way conversation
with God — or on those occasions where she glances directly at
the camera — the character is never overplayed, and our understanding
of Bess is key to our willingness to follow her on what seems to be
rather a dispiriting journey.
The performances are, in fact, uniformly excellent. The beefy Stellan
Skarsgård plays Jan as an imperfect yet admirable husband, the
kind of robust fellow who can truly demand your sympathy when he's laid
up in a hospital bed. His playful physicality in the early scenes is
key to the rest of his performance, since we need something to remember
him by once he's supine and under the influence of drugs and depression.
And Katrin Cartlidge as Bess's loving sister-in-law Dodo, who's at all
times wary of Jan's influence, is the essential intellectual bridge
between the outcast Bess and the rest of this fundamentalist community.
Von Trier's heroine is a Good Woman, but Dodo helps remind us that her
selflessness isn't wholly admirable, or rational.
That having been said, the real crux of Breaking the Waves
is a circumstance that can't be revealed in a movie review. Let's just
say that once the narrative concludes, von Trier gives us an "epilogue"
that confounds all expectations. The last moments of this film are by
far the most challenging, and after some reflection I've decided that
without them — the final shot in particular — Breaking
the Waves would simply be an extraordinary film. As is, it's a
great one. Without resort to mere words, von Trier breaks the bounds
of narrative and presents a resolution that's as troublesome as it is
fulfilling. In a bold refutation of its own grim, nearly sardonic logic,
Breaking the Waves cuts to the quick of religious faith, personal
sacrifice, and human existence.
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