More

'Melancholia' Review: Depression Has Never Looked So Gorgeous

European Film Awards Melancholia

Posted: 11/09/11 09:08 AM ET

By CHRISTY LEMIRE, The Associated Press

Depression finally seems to have brought out the best in Lars von Trier: "Melancholia" is his strongest work in a while, a devastatingly beautiful, operatic mixture of all his signature themes and visual schemes.

Doom is certain from the start. This is, after all, a von Trier film. But the director portends his characters' fate with a lengthy, wordless prelude: a series of sumptuously photographed, super-slow-motion images of sadness and frustration accompanied by the swelling overture from Wagner's "Tristan und Isolde." We see Kirsten Dunst and Charlotte Gainsbourg struggle against the elements, against themselves. We know this cannot end well.

Bombastic? But of course. Still, we're hooked. Yet melacholia isn't just a state of mind but also the name of a planet that's hurtling toward Earth. Yes, an actual planet – or a metaphor, you decide. It doesn't matter; what resonates is the resulting mood, and it's inescapable.

Von Trier himself has battled depression over the past several years; he last worked through it cinematically, and far less effectively, with the gratuitous "Antichrist" from 2009, which featured genital mutilation and the unintentional catchphrase, "Chaos reigns," uttered by an injured fox. This time, the Danish writer-director seems far more interested in exploring the depths of his characters' despair and fear, in understanding the humanity within their darker recesses, rather than shocking us for shock's sake.

Von Trier has been unjustly accused of misogyny toward his female characters, and yes, they do tend to suffer horribly. But these roles also provide enticing challenges for the actresses playing them, and in the antisocial, apprehensive bride Justine, Dunst delivers the most complex performance of her life. Everything about her carriage suggests that she's psychologically slogging through molasses just to carry out basic, daily functions like bathing and eating dinner. Quite often, you want to just hand her a prescription for Lexapro and be done with it. But Dunst also vividly conveys Justine's feeble attempts at normalcy and civility with just the slightest forced smile.

The irony is that the closer this threatening planet draws near, the better she feels. If this is the end of the world, she welcomes it.

"Melancholia" is divided into two parts, beginning with "Justine," which focuses on her lavish wedding day. It's a bad omen that the limousine carrying her and her new husband, the sweetly bland Michael (Alexander Skarsgard), repeatedly gets stuck trying to drive up the narrow, winding path to the decadent estate where the reception is taking place.


This also happens to be the home of her sister, Claire (Gainsbourg), and her wealthy husband, John (Keifer Sutherland), who become increasingly frustrated with Justine's inability to act polite and appreciative on cue. Empty rituals like cutting the wedding cake or tossing the bouquet become torturous waiting games. But weirdness abounds thanks to several invited guests, including Justine and Claire's abrasive mother (a deliciously cruel Charlotte Rampling) and Justine's boss (von Trier regular Stellan Skarsgard), who insists on hounding her about work. The cumulative train wreck, presented in matter-of-fact and often humorous fashion, is riveting and it builds a steady tension.

Von Trier depicts these awkward moments in the intimate, hand-held manner that's a key component of his stripped-down Dogme style, which stands in stark contrast to the voluptuousness of the film's start. That he combines both aesthetic approaches in the same movie – and does it so seamlessly – is the mark of an artist we cannot ignore, despite his ego and often inappropriate outbursts.

Part two, "Claire," feels less urgent, less unpredictable, but it lulls us into a somber mood in preparation for the film's climax. It follows Claire as she tries to care for her sister and raise her young son while keeping the family's rambling mansion afloat and preparing for the Earth to be swallowed whole.

John is fascinated by the approach of this other, previously unknown planet, which he insists will bypass our own entirely. Claire, however, grows more paranoid and anxious by the day – and actually does seek out some form of pharmacological relief. As she proved in "Antichrist," Gainsbourg is willing to go as far as she must in portraying her character's extremes.

"Extreme" is also a good word to describe the film's final shot. It was unnecessary; merely suggesting what happens to these people rather than showing it would have been more powerful. But von Trier has never been fond of restraint, even in his more austere pictures, so why start now?

"Melancholia," a Magnolia Pictures release, is rated R for some graphic nudity, sexual content and language. Running time: 130 minutes. Three and a half stars out of four.

FOLLOW HUFFPOST CULTURE

By CHRISTY LEMIRE, The Associated Press Depression finally seems to have brought out the best in Lars von Trier: "Melancholia" is his strongest work in a while, a devastatingly beautiful, operatic ...
By CHRISTY LEMIRE, The Associated Press Depression finally seems to have brought out the best in Lars von Trier: "Melancholia" is his strongest work in a while, a devastatingly beautiful, operatic ...
Filed by Gazelle Emami  | 
 
 
  • Comments
  • 21
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Comments are closed for this entry
View All
Favorites
Recency  | 
Popularity
09:20 AM on 01/03/2012
I saw this film last week and I agree, in very large measure, with this review. When I left the theatre, I wasn't sure whether I "got it" or it "got me"; I'm still not sure. What I am sure of is that this is an art-film filled with allegory---allegory that escaped me. And so I'm left with awkward, beautiful and portentious images at the beginning that are much more compelling than anything that followed in the film --- except the ending. And I do believe this film needed (as Ebert calls it) a "money shot": The pictorial "Gotterdamerung" of planet earth, if only to be sure that these folks were finally put out of their misery.

The one greatest flaw in the film, IMHO, is how the director used the music: I'm a fan of Wagner's music and I can tell you, listening to the SAME opening strains of Tristan was nothing short of monotonous! With the wealth of melody in Tristan (or other operas), why does he insist on repeating the same musical line? It goes nowhere! The film would have be given blood, guts and humanity by selectively inserting other motifs, i.e., Brangane's warning or even carrying the Liebistod through the end. Lars von Trier's own melancholia prevented him from bringing life to the story through music and so in the final analysis, Justine & Claire and company didn't so much die at the end,but they ceased to exist. Only Leo, Claire's little boy, lost his life.
02:19 PM on 12/12/2011
"Melancholia may be the most depressing film of the year—excepting perhaps x-rays at a cancer clinic. Part psychodrama, part sci-fi, this intriguing but portentous end-of-the-world fantasy had me checking my watch, not the Mayan calendar.
You’re in for the time of your life if you fancy a close encounter with nebulous story lines and trippy imagery. Melancholia is really two movies, schizophrenically orbiting around a gothically apocalyptic plot...."

(Entire review at deepintomovies.blogspot.com.)
09:20 AM on 12/01/2011
I saw it in the theater last weekend. I was transfixed. It is an amazing film, and one whose meaning can be discussed long afterwards.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
06:13 PM on 11/11/2011
Watched it. Loved it. Need a copy of it. Hope it's available for sale soon.
01:04 PM on 11/09/2011
it should be pointed out that while lars von trier is often grouped with the dogme 95 movement, he only shot one film in that style, 1998's 'the idiots'. great film.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Ted Bouklos
U can have ur own opinions but not ur own facts
04:55 PM on 11/11/2011
He and Thomas Vinterberg started the movement. They wrote the dogme 95 manifesto together. It's kind of hard not to be "grouped" with a movement which he created.
08:23 PM on 11/11/2011
yep and my original comment still stands.
01:00 PM on 11/09/2011
gorgeous film. but it totally disagree with lemire about the ending. i found it wholly necessary and pitch perfect. it needed that punctuation. everything was building to that end. if it were anything less it would've felt anti-climactic.
photo
MikeDu
Both salubrious and lugubrious concurrently.
12:22 PM on 11/09/2011
Earlier today I read a scathing review of the film. But then again, you can't trust reviewers anymore. Did this or that reviewer hate Melancholia but love the fistfighting robot movie? It sounds like older moviegoers may have the benefit of of having lived through the heyday of 'foreign art films'. They may come to the film with an understanding that storyline can be secondary to pictoral effect.
pavementends42
Micro-bio is a study, not a blurb.
12:03 PM on 11/09/2011
Remind anyone else of that John William Waterhouse painting...?
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
drmdj
Tired of Willful Liars.
11:28 AM on 11/09/2011
The film was beautiful, but the story was lacking. The descent into ones depression was captured nicely, but there was no redeeming qualities about any of the characters. The message I got from the movie was, no matter how hard you try, life just s u ck s and then you d i e.
01:06 PM on 11/09/2011
it was a beautiful film. i hear what you are saying about the characters, but i really thought the dunst character was inspiring (in a weird way) in her intuitiveness. once confronted with the end of the world, she was free. she saw it as empowerment. no longer beholden to the restraints of this world. she opened up and moved forward without fear.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
drmdj
Tired of Willful Liars.
01:20 PM on 11/09/2011
Thanks for pointing that out. I didn't think of that perspective. Now the whole thing makes more sense. Thanks again.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
10:08 AM on 11/09/2011
Looks good, hope its not like the "Tree of Life"...lot of hype, too obscure to appreciate. I will say visually, beautiful and I love Kirsten Dunst.
photo
JudgeCCrater
From under a NJ boardwalk thanks to free Wi-Fi!
09:34 AM on 11/09/2011
Wow. A visually arresting attempt to make me feel sorry for the SuperRich. Looks like it would work, too.
11:36 AM on 11/09/2011
The use of the super-rich is less of a matter of wealth flaunting and more of a device to isolate the characters. It also could be said to present us with a mythological allegory, turning the resort into an Olympus-like place.
photo
JudgeCCrater
From under a NJ boardwalk thanks to free Wi-Fi!
11:37 AM on 11/09/2011
I can see that. It also allows the audience to engage in a bit of wishful thinking. "My life is just like theirs!"