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Lars Von Trier Reacts To Being Banned From Cannes For Hitler Comments

Lars Von Trier

DAVID GERMAIN   05/20/11 12:00 PM ET   AP

MOUGINS, France — Lars von Trier remains contrite and respectful of the Cannes Film Festival over its decision to toss him out for saying he sympathizes with Adolf Hitler.

Yet the Danish filmmaker also relishes the new label he gained as the world's most-prestigious cinema showcase ostracized one of its favorite sons.

"I must say, `persona non grata' is a wonderful word," von Trier said Friday, a day after Cannes organizers banned him from the rest of this year's festival for his comments about Hitler, Nazis and Jews at a press conference for his festival film "Melancholia."

"It has a sweetness to it that I can't deny. I'm not at all happy about what happened, but the word is something like an order you get," said von Trier, gesturing as though pointing out a medal pinned to his chest.

Overnight, von Trier has gone from celebrated Cannes veteran to a pariah no longer welcome at the festival that bestowed its highest honor, the Palme d'Or, in 2000 for his drama "Dancer in the Dark."

The festival's board of directors branded him "persona non grata," and while "Melancholia" still is eligible for the Palme d'Or and other prizes, von Trier would not be allowed into Sunday's closing ceremony even if the film wins awards.

At the news conference Wednesday, von Trier said that while Hitler "did some wrong things," he could understand the Nazi leader and "sympathize with him a little bit." He quickly added that he supported the Jews but then wisecracked, "not too much, because Israel is a pain in the ass."

Von Trier issued an apology and said he was only joking, but the remarks brought a volley of condemnation from Jewish and Holocaust groups.

The stars of "Melancholia," including Kirsten Dunst and Charlotte Gainsbourg, sat uncomfortably through von Trier's remarks during the press conference. At one point, Dunst whispered to von Trier, "oh, my God, this is terrible."

Von Trier continued to apologize Friday.

"I'm sorry about it for my own sake, and then I'm sorry about the people, if I've hurt people," von Trier said. "That was not the intention at all. I'm very sorry for that. That was completely stupid."

His expulsion from the festival has not kept von Trier, a provocateur at heart, from holding court with reporters to publicize the film at a hotel just outside Cannes.

Von Trier has sharply divided Cannes critics in past years with films that some viewed as subjugations of women, among them pop singer Bjork's "Dancer in the Dark" and Nicole Kidman's "Dogville." Von Trier's "Antichrist," which won the festival's best-actress prize for Gainsbourg two years ago, incensed some Cannes viewers with its torture-porn images.

"Melancholia" has had a more gentle reception, a portrait of two sisters (Dunst and Gainsbourg) coming to grips with their family foibles as a rogue planet heads on a possible collision course with Earth. The film has received mixed reviews but has not polarized Cannes crowds the way some of von Trier's past entries have.

Von Trier himself has proved the polarizing presence. The filmmaker said he understands and accepts his banishment by festival organizers, who have not said if von Trier would be invited back in future years.

"I have very good love for them, and I think that what I would miss the most was to be in contact with these people," von Trier said. "I've benefited so much from Cannes."

Von Trier sought to explain what he meant when he said he sympathized with Hitler. He said the German film "Downfall," starring Bruno Ganz in a chronicle of Hitler's last days, had given him insight into the dictator and put more of a human face on him.

"Of course, I don't sympathize with what Hitler had done," von Trier said. "The only thing I said was that I, after seeing Bruno Ganz in the bunker, could kind of see a little human being sitting there. And I thought, that was very good, because I think that there's a little bit of a Nazi in all of us, and there's a little bit of a human being in Hitler, and I think to think otherwise is dangerous."

Von Trier said he might avoid press conferences from now on, saying that he could make his meaning clearer talking to reporters in small groups or one-on-one.

He also said if he had been speaking in his native Danish, he could have made his meaning far plainer.

"It makes it much easier to condemn me for my English," von Trier said. "And then people would say, `Why doesn't he just shut up?' And I agree with them."

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MOUGINS, France — Lars von Trier remains contrite and respectful of the Cannes Film Festival over its decision to toss him out for saying he sympathizes with Adolf Hitler. Yet the Danish filmma...
MOUGINS, France — Lars von Trier remains contrite and respectful of the Cannes Film Festival over its decision to toss him out for saying he sympathizes with Adolf Hitler. Yet the Danish filmma...
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11:05 PM on 05/22/2011
Well..I think there is a lot of hypocrisy on that issue...in Europe and American. Guess what? Complicity is guilt. Hitler couldn't have donw what he did, if the people living in Germany didnt sit back and do nothing, while he rounded up people and put them in concentration camps. Read the Nuremberg trials people! Read it, and weap! But dont be hypocrites. Good German people went about their business, went to work, got up every morning, and this is the truth. They were just as guilty of the Holocaust. Everyone who lived in Germany at the time, and did and said nothing is gulity. There is no such thing as a innocent bystander. Same thing, if you witness a crime,and you do nothing, your are gulity of that crime as well! ...read the Nuremberg trials transcripts, our tax dollars paid for it and it is criminal that this is not taught in the schools....
Politisizer
Cute and clever... great combo.
11:34 AM on 05/22/2011
I thought it was mildly funny. He's no comedian but some of the lines made me laugh.
10:57 AM on 05/22/2011
This is ridiculous. The Art of War states that you should "know the enemy" which I would presume would be the nazis, but really, anyone or anything which uses religious fervor and power to dominate the masses. The Oracle of Delphi says that you should "know yourself". If Lars is guilty of anything, it's exploring his environment and trying to understand it. What is wrong with that? Other people have studied WW2, other people have tried to understand what happened.
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kvolovesart
10:05 AM on 05/22/2011
What a boob...
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butchcliff
The future is unwritten
07:40 AM on 05/22/2011
Trying to be outspoken & unconventional didn't show any respect for his actors.
Dunst could only look on aghast while he ran his mouth
12:16 AM on 05/22/2011
Brilliant comment, "there's a little bit of a Nazi in all of us, and there's a little bit of a human being in Hitler, and I think to think otherwise is dangerous." It's important to remember Hitler began as a charismatic speaker who made sense to millions, not as the evil monster he eventually revealed himself to be.
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efrallyn
my micro-bio is short & sweet.
10:14 PM on 05/22/2011
SERIOUSLY?nazi's were robots who killed for the simple fact that they didnt question their authority (kind of like slaves to the man or cults that kill for NO REASON)they let a loud man w/ subliminal rhetoric turn their brain to mush..they were germans that (funny, reminds me of the tea party ppl in american) that wanted to "take their country back"..there are ALOT of hitlers out there..he didnt invent the art of brainwashing for the simpleminded..some ppl are easily brainwashed..he was alot of things and human wasnt one of them..eww what a dangerous statement...how come he never did any killings?he was the coward that sent others to do his dirty work..hitler was a ganster as well...IMO
01:54 AM on 05/23/2011
You misunderstand my statement... I agree with you, Hitler, as well as the Nazi party, are horrible and evil. I simply meant that it is important to remember that at one time they managed to seem normal and charasmatic enough to convince millions of people to turn on their neighbors, friends, even family... To forget that is to invite it to happen again.
11:54 PM on 05/21/2011
What do his stupid remarks have to do with the quality of his film, which had been getting good reviews up until that point. I didn't see The Beaver get banned because of Mel Gibson. I hear he's made so disparaging remarks against Jewish folks too, among others.

On a side note, that had to have been the most uncomfortable 5 minutes of Kirsten Dunst's life.
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Roman1
Not Liberal Or Conservative. Just A Real American.
09:47 PM on 05/21/2011
Let him continue with this behavior....and when his film is released nationwide and no one goes to see it, hopefully he'll finally learns what consequences mean.
11:02 PM on 05/21/2011
frankly, his movies will be more popular than all of those movies whose directors suck up to israel.
09:39 PM on 05/21/2011
While you can certainly sympathize with the German people following World War I because of the unbelievably stupid conditions we put upon them (see how we didn't do anything similar following WWII), you CANNOT extend that sympathy to a psychopathic, megalomaniac who insidiously and opportunistically played off the German people's misery and despair in order to enrich and empower himself while at the same time persecuting and murdering all but the most inconvenient scapegoats. Lars Von Trier is clearly an idiot.
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efrallyn
my micro-bio is short & sweet.
10:15 PM on 05/22/2011
well said.
09:29 PM on 05/21/2011
We forgive most of you.
09:11 PM on 05/21/2011
Lars Von Trier > Cannes
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07:52 PM on 05/21/2011
This was a planned stunt for publicity. It's not like he is some
dummy who didn't know what he said would be highly inflammatory 
and create a huge stir.
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Jamal Alexander
Jamal 39
06:35 PM on 05/21/2011
The joke was tasteless. He apologized. Jews need to get on with their lives
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12:33 AM on 05/22/2011
um, it was the cannes festival peeps who did this, not the chosen people who get you going (suggest taking a look at that and extending big love). peace.
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Jamal Alexander
Jamal 39
12:06 PM on 05/22/2011
Who are the chosen people? Certainly not leucifer's children (jewish people). I hope that you and everyone else learns the facts before it's too late. Just look at all of those people who bought what Camping was selling this past week.
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AbsolutDemocrat
04:21 PM on 05/21/2011
Positive comments about Hitler and/or disparaging comments about Jews prove yet again to be controversial. Who knew?
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12:34 AM on 05/22/2011
france has more strict laws about these things. this was in france.
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AbsolutDemocrat
02:06 PM on 05/23/2011
Thanks, sport. I got that.