Antichrist

Antichrist

2009, NR, 104 min. Directed by Lars von Trier. Starring Willem Dafoe, Charlotte Gainsbourg.

REVIEWED By Marc Savlov, Fri., Nov. 20, 2009

Possibly the best argument against couples therapy ever, Antichrist is a tour-de-force trip inside the mind of a dangerously depressed man. That man is Danish filmmaker von Trier, and he has gone on record as having conceived and executed Antichrist in the wake of a deep depression. His film speaks the language of madness with astonishing fluency. Dreamlike and possessed of a terrible, doom-laden beauty, Antichrist provoked jeers and walkouts when it debuted at Cannes earlier this year, but, as everyone knows, film critics are cruel bastards and not to be trusted. That said, Antichrist is a flawed masterpiece and an example of highly personal auteurism that will either make you mad or drive you mad; either way, you're complicit in von Trier's vigorously compelling nightmare of love, death, and despair. Dafoe and Gainsbourg (daughter of Serge Gainsbourg and Jane Birkin) are fearless in their absolute commitment to their respective roles as He and She, a couple that we first witness voyeuristically as they make ferocious love in their bathroom. So rapturous is their slow-motion tussling that toothbrushes and toiletries are sent flying. So is their young son, who, mesmerized by the midnight snow falling just outside his bedroom, toddles out of his crib to an open window and from there to the unforgiving pavement below. The child's death and the immense, obliterating grief that both She and He experience in its wake lead them to seek therapeutic escape to Eden, as they call their cabin in the woods of the Pacific Northwest. He is a therapist and arrogantly assumes he can assuage She's pain by this ceremonial act of withdrawal. But She is beyond such quotidian psychological salves, and, as von Trier steers his couple into the dark forest primeval (or, more accurately, primevil), Antichrist becomes a genuine horror movie. Hieronymus Bosch would be proud. Cinematographer Anthony Dod Mantle, who previously shot the equally transgressive Julien Donkey-Boy and, more recently, the surprise megahit Slumdog Millionaire, probably won't receive the Oscar he deserves for his incredibly painterly and arresting work, but he damn well deserves it. Much has been made of Antichrist's alleged misogyny, but the horrors endured and encountered by He and She are, for the most part, shared abominations. It's a horrific film in the most literal sense of the word: One recoils from it not because it frightens (that would be eliciting terror) but because the audience is drawn into a state of sympathy toward the tragedy that befalls these two, which then curdles into empathetic revulsion. Of the two, horror is the more subversive, the longer-lasting, and the more artistic, and what von Trier has created with Antichrist is a horror film for adults, the sort of grim fairy tale that will resonate distressingly with people not normally given to reading Fangoria magazine or awaiting the umpteenth reiteration of Saw's torture porn slurry. Ironically, Antichrist contains graphic, and I mean graphic, scenes of both torture and porn, or at least vivid sexual intercourse, but it's all in the service of von Trier's nightmarish fantasy. It's probably a kindness that radical feminist Andrea Dworkin is already dead, because she'd likely set herself alight like one of those Vietnam-protesting monks had she lived to see von Trier's hellish vision of intergender relationships. In the film's most infamous sequence, He encounters a demonic and hideously mutilated fox in the tall grasses that surround the woods. "Chaos reigns," says the fox, presumably acting as proxy for von Trier's own battered psyche. Chaos reigns, indeed, but let's at least attempt to be as unflinchingly honest as von Trier: When has Chaos not? [Editor's note: An error of fact has been corrected in this review since original publication.]

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KEYWORDS FOR THIS FILM

Antichrist, Lars von Trier, Willem Dafoe, Charlotte Gainsbourg

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