Björk crooned her way to victory at the greatest Cannes Film Festival of all time

Film Features Y2K Week
Björk crooned her way to victory at the greatest Cannes Film Festival of all time
Dancer In The Dark Photo: Ronald Siemoneit/Sygma

Forty whole minutes pass before Dancer In The Dark asserts its aspirations to the grand MGM musical tradition. Up until that point, Lars von Trier’s prizewinning melodrama has operated in a mode of spartan neorealism, unfurling the decidedly non-musical story of Selma (Icelandic pop star Björk), a Czech immigrant slowly losing her eyesight in the small-town America of the 1960s. But then comes the first intrusion of song and dance. In the factory where Selma works, the grind of heavy machinery begins to coalesce into a thumping industrial rhythm—a sick beat, unmistakably. And then the factory floor is a dance floor, the movements of Selma’s coworkers shifting into a quasi-synchronized routine, as Björk’s singular voice rises on the soundtrack and the yearning “Cvalda” materializes in full. Selma, who loves old Hollywood musicals, is suddenly starring in one—or, at least, in the approximation of one she’s created in her mind, from the drab foundation of her surroundings and on harsh, flat early digital video instead of in Technicolor.

Oh, to have experienced this sudden genre pivot fresh, with no foreknowledge of its arrival. By the time Dancer In The Dark hit American screens in the fall of 2000, its reputation as “the Lars von Trier musical” preceded it. Perhaps audiences at the Cannes Film Festival also had an inkling of what was to come; it had been highly publicized that the Danish provocateur behind Breaking The Waves and The Idiots had hired Björk to both headline and compose original songs for his latest dramatic experiment. But that was about all anyone knew when the film premiered on May 17, 2000, roughly 24 hours after von Trier finished his final cut. Those in attendance got to experience Dancer In The Dark—and its belated transformation into a low-fi throwback to the heyday of Vincente Minnelli—with very few preconceptions. Which, of course, is one of the main benefits of attending the Cannes Film Festival: the ability to go into a movie almost completely unknowing.

Another, more obvious allure of the fest is the possibility of seeing a bunch of great films, period. And, by that metric, 2000 might be the greatest Cannes of them all. Dancer In The Dark, which would take home the festival’s top prize—the prestigious Palme d’Or—bested some truly stiff competition: In The Mood For Love, Code Unknown, Songs From The Second Floor, Esther Kahn, Yi Yi, and O Brother, Where Art Thou? all debuted on the Croisette that May. Outside the official competition, moviegoers got their first look at Ang Lee’s future international blockbuster Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon, at Darren Aronofsky’s glorified (but gloriously stylized) D.A.R.E. campaign Requiem For A Dream, and at the lovely Agnès Varda documentary The Gleaners And I. Directors’ Fortnight—which takes place in Cannes during Cannes every year—boasted the premiere of Béla Tarr’s astonishing Werckmeister Harmonies, while fellow sidebar festival Critics’ Week nabbed the first and arguably still best movie by Alejandro González Iñárritu, Amores Perros. It was the kind of Cannes you dream about: a fortnight of wall-to-wall milestones, triumphs, and masterpieces.

In a year with so many major works, maybe it’s audacity that makes the difference. For that, one can always count on von Trier. By 2000, he was not just a staple of Cannes but one of the festival’s most reliable controversy magnets, both for the films themselves (The Idiots, about a group of troublemakers pretending to have developmental disabilities, drummed up some outrage two years earlier) and for making off-color remarks at post-screening press conferences (a habit that finally got him banned, albeit temporarily, when he half-joked about empathizing with Hitler in 2011). Von Trier’s carefully cultivated “bad boy” reputation made Dancer In The Dark the hottest ticket of the festival. Critics were divided on the movie—its Palme win reportedly provoked its share of cheers and boos—and remained so when it made its way to American theaters in the fall. Raves sat alongside pans, sometimes literally: Entertainment Weekly, for example, ran two reviews, one proclaiming it among the best of the year and the other denouncing it as a “crock.”

Perhaps it was a bit of both. There’s little denying that Dancer In The Dark, like so much of von Trier’s work, is as much stunt as movie—a bomb-throwing experiment high on its own conceptual daring. It was his first film shot entirely in English, and his first set, though definitely not made, in the States. (As some of von Trier’s detractors relish pointing out, he’s never been to America, as if one needs to set foot in this country to get a sense of its values and history and failings.) Despite the veneer of naturalism conferred by the performances and handheld aesthetic, the film’s Washington State backdrop is basically the idea of America circa the 1960s, though it wasn’t until the films that followed that von Trier began more explicitly critiquing our national character.

Selma, who’s been cast in a local production of The Sound Of Music, spends most of her time at the factory; she’s saving up for an operation for her young son (Vladica Kostic), who’s doomed to suffer from the same genetic illness dimming his mother’s vision. Around her, von Trier builds an ensemble of townsfolk, many caught between archetype and fully fleshed character: the kind-hearted stiff (Peter Stormare) devoted to Selma, even though she won’t date him; the tragically weak cop (David Morse) whose financial woes eventually envelop our heroine; the merciless district attorney (Željko Ivanek) who seems to embody the cruel indifference of the legal system. The most prominent (and improbable) of these supporting figures is Kathy (Catherine Deneuve), Selma’s tough but empathetic coworker and the most regally French factory worker to ever settle down in some rustic corner of the Pacific Northwest. Deneuve, of course, is partly on hand for the echoes of two small-scale musical classics—including a past Palme winner—her presence provides.

Not that there’s ever been a musical with numbers quite like those in Dancer In The Dark, all built around Björk’s eccentric, sweeping tunes, which she’d release as the sort-of soundtrack album Selmasongs. (One of them, the touching duet of surrender “I’ve Seen It All,” was nominated for an Oscar.) Von Trier famously shot many of these sequences with upwards of 100 cameras filming simultaneously, and then cut them into a frenetic Michael Bay collage of movement and action—a choice that feels more like the director experimenting for experimentation’s sake than finding a coherent way to express the movie playing in Selma’s head. That said, there’s still something affecting about the scenes, which suggest that Selma is cobbling together a musical from the raw materials of her life. There’s no snide irony in the discrepancy between her circumstances and the sunniness of her fantasies: Von Trier sincerely believes in the coping mechanism she’s found in Hollywood spectacle.

The film’s power really derives from its lead performance, which won the Best Actress prize at the festival, to much less dispute. Björk, who had little acting experience (she made one film before and one after), has the radiant expressiveness of a silent film star, but also a total lack of affectation. Like the movie itself, she seems to exist at the intersection of real and unreal; when Selma disappears into her head, she becomes a star without shedding the character’s small, eccentric humanity. Dancer In The Dark is a portrait of pure selflessness. That Selma can exist as both an impossible ideal—doomed to be destroyed for her innocence—and an actual character is a testament to Björk’s uncanny performance. And it fits into von Trier’s fruitful strategy of never abstracting the emotions in his films, even when the plots themselves take on the shape of metaphor or allegory. Whatever Selma may represent, there’s nothing artificial about the agony and ecstasy of her final scenes.

Whether it was worth what von Trier put her through is another matter. Dancer In The Dark hit Cannes heavy with rumors of a toxic on-set relationship; though the two appeared hand-in-hand on the red carpet, Björk skipped the press conference. Headlines at the time sold a classic clash of egos: the infamously demanding director butting heads with a superstar diva who wasn’t used to the pressures of a film shoot. Von Trier cultivated this version of events in interviews, remarking that “Björk is not an actor, which was a surprise to me because she seemed so professional. And that is what is so good about the thing, is that she’s not acting anything in this film, she is feeling it. Which is incredible, but hard on her and hard on everyone.” A few years ago, however, after the #MeToo movement took off, Björk came forward with allegations of misconduct, insisting that von Trier sexually harassed her on set. These accusations gel uncomfortably with his reputation as a filmmaker tough on his actresses. It’s hard not to watch Dancer In The Dark through the lens of her claims and everything we know about the hell of making the film.

To the charges of misogyny leveled at his work, von Trier has insisted that he identifies with his heroines—that they are proxies for him, and that their pain is a fictionalized expression of his own. Certainly, he’s always been obsessed with suffering, even before he started explicitly making movies about his own struggles with depression. Dancer In The Dark, like his earlier Breaking The Waves, is a fable of martyrdom. At Cannes, von Trier wrote a letter begging critics not to spoil the ending. But even those unfamiliar with his work could probably surmise, early on, that Selma’s troubles—as an immigrant, a single mother, a daydreamer in a harsh world—were not likely to improve over two-and-a-half pitiless hours. Her downfall is undeniably contrived; von Trier engineers a tragedy that hinges entirely on Selma’s unwavering capacity for sacrifice, her unimpeachable goodness. If the film packs an emotional wallop, Björk is the one who provides it, investing this persecution story with real feeling.

Years earlier, von Trier coauthored the Dogme 95 manifesto, laying down rigid commandments (no artificial lighting, no special effects, etc.) to which few of the participating filmmakers actually seemed capable of adhering. Though shot on video instead of 35mm—that’s one commandment broken immediately—Dancer seems, at first, to have been made at least in the spirit of the Dogme movement, creating a sense of grimy life-on-the-margins realism in its first act. When those DIY musical sequences do finally arrive, they feel like a jarring interruption in more ways than one: It’s not just Selma rejecting the drab despair of her life—dancing in the dark, as it were—but also von Trier rejecting the kind of movie he seems to be making in that first act. He’d keep reinventing himself from here, beginning with the film he brought to Cannes three years later—another tale of female victimhood in America, with even greater horrors piled on its heroine and a much more exaggerated distancing device. The big difference, though, would lie in the heroine herself: Grace, unlike Selma, won’t just accept life’s cruelties. She finds her own darkness in the dark.

Did it deserve to win? Again, audacity counts for a lot. But in a such a great year for the festival, there were even better choices—like Wong Kar-wai’s exquisitely romantic In The Mood For Love, or Edward Yang’s magnificent Yi Yi, which just topped our list of 2000’s best films.

29 Comments

  • maebellelien-av says:

    A friend of mine, through some horrible misunderstanding of what the movie was, took a first date to this. There was no second.

  • citricola-av says:

    Fuck Dancer in the Dark. Fuck it’s ugly misery porn, fuck it’s randomly edited musical sequences, fuck it’s entire point of view, fuck everything about it except maybe one or two of the Bjork songs.I hate few movies more. Battlefield Earth is the only thing possibly worse than it in 2000, but at least that’s watchable.

    • andyfromchicago-av says:

      Do yourself a favor and don’t watch Dogville, Manderlay, or, well, pretty much everything he made after.

      • ohnoray-av says:

        I cheered for Nicole’s revenge at the end of Dogville, that I almost forget how long the misery went on beforehand, is that what revenge feels like?! point made I guess.

      • sybann-av says:

        Yep. He’s gotten worse. If I’d seen “Breaking the Waves” first, I never would have bothered seeing anymore of his films. Awful horrible cinematic sexual abuse.

      • broncohenry-av says:

        Right, or Antichrist which is, “nothing happens, nothing happens, nothing happens, genital destruction for everyone! Credits.”I have very conflicting thoughts on Melancholia though.

    • jomahuan-av says:

      i don’t actively hate it, but i 100% agree with you.i honestly don’t understand why someone would watch this film more than once.

    • lolotehe-av says:

      Yeah, going with Aristotle on this one:
      “It follows plainly, in the first place, that the change of fortune presented
      must not be the spectacle of a virtuous man brought from prosperity to
      adversity: for this moves neither pity nor fear; it merely shocks us.”The ending was the destruction of a good person by their moral inferiors. It was disgusting.

    • josiesposies-av says:

      Hate the film if you must, but the songs are uniformly stunning. 

    • bassplayerconvention-av says:

      Oh, come on now.Battlefield Earth is not watchable.

  • bishbah-av says:

    I saw this movie in theaters, technically twice, because the first time the building caught fire about 30 minutes in and we were evacuated. I must have been some kind of masochist in my 20s because I returned. I adore Björk, but I absolutely detested this film.Also, the soundtrack album shows how two distinctive, talented voices can utterly fail to blend as a duet. “I’ve Seen It All” is a song in which Björk and Thom Yorke sing at one another, not with.

    • tacobells4her-av says:

      I adore Bjork too, but whew, Lars Von Trier films are painful experiences. I can’t say I detest Dancer in the Dark, but I can’t bring myself to watch it again. The music is nice, but I never was keen on Bjork and Thom’s duet either. I actually preferred the movie version with Peter Stormare!

    • josiesposies-av says:

      It’s one of the most startlingly gorgeous pieces of pop music ever put to tape. And it’s not supposed to be “Endless Love”, you pretentious tit.

    • khatrupaul-av says:

      I have seen the movie twice and thought it was OK both times. The soundtrack is my favorite Björk album and one of my top 10 favorite albums.  In all the dozens of times I’ve listened to it, have never processed that Björk and Thom Yorke are supposed to be singing to each other.

      • bishbah-av says:

        On Selmasongs, I like “Scatterheart” best, and also “New World.” Albumwise, it’s a tough call. Homogenic has a special place in my heart, but I also really like Medúlla.

        • khatrupaul-av says:

          It’s definitely a tough choice among Bjork albums.  For me, Selmasongs has the strongest stylistic thread running through it and no clunkers as far as songs. But would not object to anyone picking… really any other Bjork album as their favorite.By the way, in case it wasn’t clear, I was agreeing with you on “I’ve Seen It All”—the lyrics definitely suggest a call and response, but Bjork/Yorke don’t carry it off that way at all. I wonder how Thom feels about being outsung by noted crooner Peter Stormare.

  • moviesmoviesmoviesallfree-av says:

    Kingdom ka-ka-ka-ka Kingdom. Say what you will about Von Trier (he hasn’t made a good movie since Melancholia and maybe he only made one or two good movies before) but when Dancer in the Dark came out he was riding high on the wave of popularity in the states because of Kingdom. The miniseries played on a loop on HBO. It was in every video store. It was the best thing he’ll ever do. The writer of this article omits this information. 

  • annihilatrix--av says:

    crazy.  i just mentioned this movie a couple weeks ago in a reddit thread

  • vaunniesmustardayonnaise-av says:

    Can we put a moratorium on editorializing Lars von Trier as a “provocateur”? If we’re reading an article on Lars von Trier, then we already know what he is.

  • sybann-av says:

    Lars von Trier is undeniably talented. I thought this movie was incredible but I didn’t exactly like it. …And I have HATED everything else I’ve seen by him and find it incredible that he can get any woman to work with him anymore. He really seems to hate us.

  • dondimello-av says:

    I can’t speak to the his behaviour on other sets but I will say that there is a full behind-the-scenes documentary about the making of Dogville on Youtube and it is fascinating. If there is someone who could claim abuse on that set it is inarguably Paul Bettany. Von Trier is absolutely dismissive of him and any concerns he has and all but tells Bettany to just shut the fuck up and say the lines, to the point where he considers bailing on the whole production. It’s also hilarious how much Lauren Bacall fucks with the director and he is clearly scared shitless of her.

  • witheringcrossfire-av says:

    I think your reduction of Requiem for a Dream to “glorified DARE campaign” is very unfair.  Filmmakers make endless anti-war films and they are praised for being bold and daring, but you make a film that suggests heroin use might be bad and you’re just an afterschool special? 

  • bittens-av says:

    My most pretentious (and kinda assholish) high school English teacher looooved Von Trier and this movie in particular. He held screenings of it at school, and when I had him one year he tried to have us study it, but he kept starting the movie over and we never made it to the end. The first time a lot of students were away, and then we got pulled into the proper coursework set out by state guidelines, so by the time we got back to Dancer In The Dark he figured we should start from the beginning again, only to have the same thing happen. I did see the ending myself on television about a year later.
    After Bjork’s disclosures about what happened on the set, I do wonder if he’s still singing the praises of Von Trier to his students and having them study this movie.

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