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Wolves
at the Door
DOGVILLE
Dir. Lars von Trier, Denmark, Lions Gate
As a moral tirade it’s overloaded
and worn-out—ruminations on long-held American mythologies,
human bestiality, and Christian allegory dumped into
a food processor, ground into a mealy pulp and served
up as cold comfort food for the politically weary. Yet
why does this noxious protein shake, chunky with bitter
arrogance and tart condescension, go down so smoothly?
How does Lars von Trier manage to pull off an experiment
so audacious that it makes his prior pain-brings-enlightenment
parables seem like mere prologues? Von Trier’s elegantly
angry Dogville, despite its predilection for
audience-goosing, is an exhilarating pilgrimage into
Darkest Human Nature: as emotionally exacting as we’ve
come to expect from the director, and as primally insinuating
as well. As a technical exercise, it’s unimpeachable;
each camera set-up, each metaphysical visual layer,
each situational theater gambit validates the artform.
Like Assayas’s demonlover and Van Sant’s Elephant,
an imperfect film is able to elicit prime emotional
impact—it seems to matter little that none of these
films reach that moment when everything coalesces and
can be boiled down to a finite, single statement. These
films are unwieldy, but how can they not be? The aesthetic
choices of these filmmakers dictate the sociopolitical
boundaries in which their films function. demonlover’s
techno-apocalyptic cry of moral dissolution gets tangled
a bit in kinetic overload, a tenuous balancing act of
spy-movie conventions and corporate sterility that alienates
many from its message; meanwhile, Elephant seeks
new perspectives on the lurking threat of teen violence,
yet is neutralized by its Kubrickian art-house gravitas,
an ominous crawl through a detached hipster netherworld.
Likewise, Von Trier’s inability to completely unyoke
his political intentions in no way diminishes the experience
of Dogville, which can only be described as creeping
terror. Von Trier’s prime gimmick here—to set his film
in a quaint Rocky Mountain town and then eschew location
shooting and even conventional sets—seems to me not
so much a Brechtian experiment as a whittling down of
themes and ideas into a harmonious melding of image
and context; the effect isn’t distancing in the least,
on the contrary, it’s desperately intimate, metaphorically
streamlined, and horribly refined. One could imagine
that the hamlet of Dogville is nestled into the
crook of a mountainside or perhaps sprouting from the
gorge of a valley, but all we see is a black soundstage
with chalk outlines where the houses and walls ought
to be. By effectively displacing Dogville—which
seems to consist of one main street, a small footbridge,
a bench, and a mound of bulbous rock at the far end—into
a hovering realm of practiced theatricality, Von Trier
not only reacts to those critics who laughed off his
prior film Dancer in the Dark’s unconvincing
Denmark-as-Pacific-Northwest locations. It’s an effort
to make a site-specific text speak for a common purpose—human
corruption lurks in these shadowy wide-open spaces with
a primordial universality. A Danish soundstage stands
in for small-town America; small-town America, its myriad
natural beauties negated by an eternal night-time, stands
in for moral vacancy.
But more than mere human fallacy, an admittedly easy
target especially for Von Trier, who specializes in
man’s inhumanity to man (or more accurately, woman),
what’s on trial here are outmoded American mythologies,
both literary and judicial. Von Trier already had his
“Heart of Gold” trilogy (Breaking the Waves,
The Idiots, Dancer in the Dark), in which
pure goodness always lost out to territorial hypocrisies
and general bad behavior but reached a level of spiritual
fulfillment attainable only in the afterlife, and Dogville
ultimately feels like a true subversion of his own martyrdom
fetishes. The Christianity at the core of his films
has always transformed his leading ladies into masochistic
saints at best, abused playthings at worst. Dogville’s
mystery woman, Grace (ubiquitous and ever-evolving Nicole
Kidman) initially seems to possess a heart of gold straight
out of Sunnybrook Farm, arriving in a closed-off community
and inadvertently spreading cheer wherever she goes,
once she’s accepted by the hesitant townsfolk. From
early-century Capra-corn and Thornton Wilder sentiment
all the way to Sundance-kissed American indie fare (The
Spitfire Grill, anyone?), the conventions have proven
steadfast, that main street USA opens its arms to outsiders,
that community provides the backbone of a strong, proud
nation. Yet there are Biblical implications here—this
time Von Trier dredges up Old Testament furies instead
of New Testament theologies. Ultimately, Kidman is less
martyr than avenging angel—and a hard rain’s gonna fall.
If there doesn’t seem to be anything truly subversive
or unique anymore in delving into the “darker side of
Americana,” considering the politic at play in the works
of David Lynch and his seemingly endless bunch of imitators,
then it’s the approach that’s revelatory. Von Trier’s
borderless homesteads reveal the close-knit neighbors
as a hop, skip, and a jump away from mob mentality.
Von Trier’s back-bending cynicism, his attempt to peel
back the layers to reveal the snarling beast beneath
may be forced, but his grim accounting of mass conformity
is frighteningly truthful. The denizens of Dogville,
knowing that Grace is wanted by the law, all begrudgingly
agree to hide her within their walls (with no literal
walls to speak of, this of course eventually becomes
an impossibility…) yet gradually turn against her. When
Kidman is defiled by a particularly brutal “neighbor,”
the walls are gone, the rape visible to all, yet they’ve
turned a blind eye. With nothing but dead air as a substitute
for invisible boundaries, the notion of neighborhood
is condensed into something more like a conspiratorial
cluster. Von Trier expertly captures the selfishness
and bottom-feeding capitalist structures that make each
resident’s individual rejection of Grace a reflection
of a diseased communal stance. He draws you in to every
minute gesture, showing that conformity occurs inevitably,
gradually, terribly. And as in Arthur Miller’s The
Crucible, a sort of spiritual inspiration, things
begin to spin out of control due to the smallest instance
of instinctual burgeoning sexuality, from one of the
town’s prepubescent residents. “Spank me…” he pleads.
And the rest is history.
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The rest of the Dogville residents are played by a
seemingly endless parade of supporting actors with severe
indie cred (Patricia Clarkson, Jeremy Davies, Chloë
Sevigny), Euro art-house standbys (Stellan SkarsgDrd,
Jean-Marc Barr) and bona fide Hollywood stars (Lauren
Bacall, James Caan). Their relatively brief screen time
comes across as less an act of nose-thumbing disdain
for American idolatry than as a rather effective visual
tactic. Silent, but often noticeable in the corner of
the frame, Bacall and the others becomes blind witnesses—the
eyes of judgment coming from all sides, the hot breath
of self-righteousness creeping from the corner of each
grimace. Certainly each player wants a piece of the
spotlight, a way to gain narrative supremacy; their
resentment of Kidman attains a meta-edge. Breaking from
the herd, albeit temporarily, Paul Bettany plays Grace’s
defender and would-be paramour, Tom Edison Jr. (despite
the namesake, Von Trier cynically gives him, this Edison
invents nothing). Bettany’s splotchy, tremulous, self-motivated
betrayer is one of Von Trier’s most satisfying creations,
yearningly romantic and opaquely idealistic at once,
an indecisive “idea” man with no follow-through. The
director would undoubtedly label this spineless string
bean a quintessential American. Yet he comes across
as more classical in spirit, a Hamletesque pragmatist,
all talk with no room for non-intellectualized passion,
whose wishy-washy behavior leads to the misfortunes
of others as well as himself.
If Von Trier at times bounds over and shortchanges many
of his characters, he is nevertheless a master storyteller,
a compellingly devious spinner of yarns. He can draw
you in ever tighter until you realize, along with his
female protagonists, that the world is closing in on
you from all sides. Here, a gorgeously woody tableau
of Nicole Kidman, attempting to escape to freedom by
lying in the back of a flatbed apple truck, a transparent
cloak draped over the frame, expresses a claustrophobia
unbearable in its implications. Grace’s sleeping figure,
framed by boxes of spilling apples, becomes the center
of a Joseph Cornell-like architectural expression: Kidman
might as well be trapped under glass. Each decision
she makes (to stay, to leave…) seems to further doom
her.
Likewise, Björk’s unnervingly wrongheaded murder of
the thieving cop in Dancer in the Dark was a
turning of the screw of the highest order; it sealed
her fate. Yet that film’s vague political critique and
anti-capital punishment statements seemed to befall
its circuitous opera/melodramatics almost by happenstance.
Here, Von Trier progresses to the next level, letting
his twin themes of self-aggrandizing American ideologies
and human weakness commingle evenly, neither achieving
total narrative dominance. Perhaps this is why so many
are so alienated by it: without a strong central thesis,
all that’s left are moods, occasional epiphanies, and
rushes of primal emotion. Von Trier may be accused of
blatant anti-Americanism, but it’s not Americans under
attack in this passion play, but the politics of a mythology
from which a current political mindset feeds. The plot
trajectory is swift and simple: American villagers take
in an outsider, yet their policies of bourgeois self-interest
eventually abandon and alienate the Other. In Von Trier’s
world, this paves the way for apocalypse.
I don’t feel that Von Trier means to justify the retribution
that climaxes Dogville—I believe he sees it as
a reflection of an ongoing human struggle in which every
shattering world event has its nexus in human instinct.
Not the seeds of terrorism, per se, but of suffering,
surely. The closing Walker Evansesque photo montage
of sad-eyed Depression-era American migrant workers
and fringe dwellers, is the clincher for most audience
members. At the NY Film Festival, it either caused remarkably
spontaneous boos or impassioned applause. Perhaps the
kneejerk response is appropriate, considering the film
itself is a kneejerk response. If Dogville is
nearly bursting with ideology and mythology-busting
quandaries, the climactic slideshow is the rubber band
just barely keeping the plastic bag from leaking all
over the floor. Is Von Trier, who anachronistically,
pointedly scores the sequence to Bowie’s “Young Americans,”
trying to do anything more than merely provoke, to offer
up Tom Joad as simply another nefarious fiction? Or
is the unorthodox mix of up-tempo pop irony and the
bedraggled faces of legions of haunted American figures
an attempt to reconcile American experience of the subjugated
masses with the myths that gloss over their plight?
Either way, here the stagy artifice finally melts away.
Indeed this is far too heady a close for a film so skeptical
of human decency, and Von Trier comes off as both actively
disingenuous and lazy—but difficult to pin down. Working
with hurried brilliance, he has, from his safe distance,
insinuated his way into the folkloric past, and demonstrated
its ability to set the groundwork for the political
present.
—MICHAEL KORESKY |
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