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News About Denmark That Won't Make DMs Headlines

blackrock13

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http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/20110518/ennew_afp/entertainmentfilmfestivalcannestriernazi

CANNES, France (AFP) – Danish director Lars von Trier apologised on Wednesday after he said at the Cannes film festival that he sympathised "a little bit" with Adolf Hitler, shocking his star Kirsten Dunst.
Von Trier, a frequent provocateur, told a press conference after a well-received screening of his apocalyptic new picture "Melancholia" that he understood the Nazi leader.
"I really wanted to be a Jew and then I found out that I was really a Nazi. You know because my family was German, Hartmann, which also gave me some pleasure," he said with a cheerful smile when asked about his German heritage.
"I understand Hitler. I think he did some wrong things, yes absolutely, but I can see him sitting in his bunker in the end."
When Dunst, who is also of German descent, started looking uncomfortable and murmured "oh my God, this is terrible," to co-star Charlotte Gainsbourg, the director assured her: "But there will come a point at the end of this".
"I'm just saying that I think I understand the man. He's not what you would call a good guy, but, yeah, I understand much about him, and I sympathise with him a little bit, yes. But, come on, I'm not for the Second World War. And I'm not against Jews."
In a brief statement sent by email to AFP by one of his producers, Meta Louise Foldager, von Trier apologised for what he had said.
"If I have hurt someone this morning by the words I said at the press conference, I sincerely apologize," he said. "I am not anti-Semitic or racially prejudiced in any way, nor am I a Nazi."
Von Trier's press conference remarks also included some thoughts on Israel and Hitler's chief architect Albert Speer.
"I am of course very much for Jews, not too much, because Israel is a pain in the ass," he said.
"Still -- how can I get out of this sentence? -- I just want to say, about the art, I'm very much for Speer," he said, adding that the convicted Nazi war criminal had "talent".
"Okay, I'm a Nazi," he shrugged, prompting nervous laughter.
He then deadpanned that his next movie could be "The Final Solution", the Nazis' code word for the Holocaust.
Trade magazine The Hollywood Reporter leapt on the story, saying von Trier had pulled a "Mel Gibson in Cannes", referring to the actor's notorious anti-Semitic and sexist rants in recent years.
"Von Trier has never been very P.C. (politically correct) and his Cannes press conferences always play like a dark stand-up routine, but at the Melancholia press conference he took it to another level, tossing a grenade into any sense of public decorum," it wrote.
"If this were America, not Cannes, (it) would have meant career suicide."
Gibson skipped the Cannes press conference for his new film "The Beaver" on Tuesday, citing a previous commitment in Los Angeles, but later walked the red carpet with his director Jodie Foster.

BOOT TO THE HEAD!!
 

danmand

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Von Trier’s anti-Semitic remarks cause Cannes controversy

Published 19.05.11 12:14

Industry insider believes comments will derail his film’s Palme d’Or bid

As is often the case at the Cannes Film Festival, something other than the actual movie screenings is grabbing the headlines, and this year it would appear to be Lars von Trier's turn to provide the controversy with comments about the Holocaust and his ambition to make a pornographic film starring Kirsten Dunst.

Von Trier’s new film ‘Melancholia’ enjoyed its world premiere last night to reasonably positive feedback from the traditionally hard-to-please Cannes audience. Critics were already blunting their pens in anticipation of swallowing their preconceptions when they sat down for the post-screening press conference. But then the director proceeded to dig a hole from which he couldn’t escape.

Sitting with several of the film’s actors - including Dunst, Charlotte Gainsbourg, John Hurt and Stellan Skarsgard – Von Trier embarked on a prolonged ramble after being asked about his fascination with the Nazi aesthetic.

“I thought I was a Jew for a long time and was very happy being a Jew," said Von Trier. “Then later on came Susanne Bier [who is Jewish] and then suddenly I wasn't so happy about being a Jew. No, that was a joke, sorry. But it turned out I was not a Jew, but even if I'd been a Jew, I would be kind of a second-rate Jew because there is kind of a hierarchy in the Jewish population. But anyway, I really wanted to be a Jew, and then I found out I was really a Nazi, you know, because my family was German ... which also gave me some pleasure" (see the video).

A stunned press pack looked on, and Von Trier felt compelled to continue.

"What can I say? I understand Hitler. I think he did some wrong things, yes absolutely, but I can see him sitting in his bunker in the end. I think I understand the man. He's not what you would call a good guy, but I understand much about him and I sympathise with him a little bit. But come on, I'm not for the Second World War, and I'm not against Jews. I am of course very much for Jews. No, not too much because Israel is a pain in the ass. But still, how can I get out of this sentence?"

Though the discomfort on the faces of his cast was painfully obvious, most of the comments would make sense to those familiar with Von Trier’s upbringing. He did not discover until he was 33 that his non-religious Jewish father was not his biological father, who was in fact an artistic German – a revelation he learnt from his mother on her death bed. In a 2005 interview with signandsight.com, he revealed that his mother slept with the man because her husband had such ordinary genes. “If I'd known that my mother had this plan, I would have become something else,” he said. “I would have shown her. The slut!”

However, worse was still to come when a reporter asked if he could imagine making a film that was even bigger in scale than ‘Melancholia’.

"Yeah, that's what we Nazis ... we have a tendency to try to do things on a greater scale. Yeah, maybe you could persuade me." And he was also heard to mutter: "the final solution with journalists", before concluding with: "OK, I'm a Nazi."

The most visibly affected of the actors was Dunst, who was seen to whisper “Oh my God, this is terrible" and at the end: "Oh Lars, that was intense.” Asked about her nude scene in the film, Von Trier told journalists he intended to do a porn film with her.

"Now she wants more,” he said. “That's how women are, and Charlotte is behind this. They want a really, really, really hardcore film this time, and I'm doing my best.”

Already, film industry experts are predicting that this will eliminate the chances of ‘Melancholia’ winning the Palme D’Or, the result of which is expected on Sunday. Von Trier previously won the award in 2000 with ‘Dancer in the Dark’.

"You can't award him a Palme d'Or, politically," Jason Solomons, a journalist with the Observer newspaper who is the chairman of the Film Critics' Circle in London, told Reuters. "People might say it should go to the art and not the artist, but these days I don't think that's true or right.”

And the comments have drawn complaints from various Jewish bodies, including the American Gathering of Holocaust Survivors and their Descendants, which said in a statement: "Holocaust survivors condemn Von Trier's repulsive comments as an insensitive exploitation of victims' suffering for self-serving promotion and publicity. We cannot give a review of his film, but as a person Von Trier is a moral failure.”

Von Trier has since the incident made a public apology, but the ‘anti-Semitic’ tag can be a difficult one to shake off. Hollywood Reporter has already observed that the director has "pulled a Mel Gibson" – an actor/director who five years on from making anti-Jewish comments is still suffering the repercussions.
 

danmand

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There is speculation, that Von Trier forgot to take his medication. He is known for having serious mental problems.
 

DATYdude

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Great filmmaker though.
 

Don Draper

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Great filmmaker though.
Hmmmm..

I'm not so sure about that. A lot of it is self indulgent and steeped in self righteous magnanimity like "Antichrist".

"Dancer in the Dark" was very good but he lucked out on a completely naturalist performance from Bjork who can never be cast in anything else. He caught lighting in a bottle there.

"Breaking the Waves" gave us Emily Watson so I'm still waiting for a return to such form from von Trier.

Anyone who presents such profound themes through his oeuvre, should know better to steer clear of statements such as "I sympathize with Hitler". Certain topics will always be off limits for film panel discussion such as Nazism in a sympathetic light.

He's a bigger fool than I though for saying so and this will follow him for his entire career and beyond that.

And he's certainly not getting the Palme d'Or this year
 
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danmand

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Von Trier is a notorious troublemaker and a mentally disturbed person. He drives a motorhome to Cannes, because he refuses to use airplanes and I suppose trains.
 

blackrock13

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Von Trier is a notorious troublemaker and a mentally disturbed person. He drives a motorhome to Cannes, because he refuses to use airplanes and I suppose trains.
One of the most famous motor home travelers was John Madden. He was also afraid to fly, so what. This guy is a flake and has been caught with his tongue up his arse.

CBC reports his subsequent comments saying he's kind of proud of being banned and he feel he should be entertaining at press conferences like this. Mentality ill, dunno, but definitely wacked.
 
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