Europa (film)
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Europa | |
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File:Europa (film).jpg
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Directed by | Lars von Trier |
Produced by | Peter Aalbæk Jensen Bo Christensen[1] |
Written by | Lars von Trier Niels Vørsel |
Starring | Jean-Marc Barr Barbara Sukowa Udo Kier Ernst-Hugo Järegård |
Narrated by | Max von Sydow |
Music by | Joachim Holbek |
Cinematography | Henning Bendtsen Edward Klosinski Jean-Paul Meurisse |
Edited by | Hervé Schneid |
Production
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Distributed by | Nordisk Film Biografdistribution |
Release dates
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Running time
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114 minutes[3] |
Country | Denmark France Germany Poland Sweden Switzerland |
Language | English German |
Budget | DKK 28 million |
Europa (Zentropa in North America) is a 1991 Danish drama art film directed by Lars von Trier. It is von Trier's third theatrical feature film and the final film in his Europa trilogy following The Element of Crime (1984) and Epidemic (1987).
The film features an international cast, including the French-American Jean-Marc Barr, Germans Barbara Sukowa and Udo Kier, expatriate American Eddie Constantine, and the Swedes Max von Sydow and Ernst-Hugo Järegård.
Europa was influenced by Franz Kafka's Amerika, and the name of the film was chosen "as an echo" of that novel.[4]
Contents
Plot
A young, idealistic American hopes to "show some kindness" to the German people soon after the end of World War II. In US-occupied Germany, he takes on work as a sleeping car conductor for the Zentropa railway network, falls in love with a femme fatale, and becomes embroiled in a pro-Nazi terrorist conspiracy.
Cast
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- Max von Sydow - Narrator
- Jean-Marc Barr - Leopold Kessler
- Barbara Sukowa - Katharina Hartmann
- Udo Kier - Lawrence Hartmann
- Ernst-Hugo Järegård - Uncle Kessler
- Henning Jensen - Siggy
- Erik Mørk - Pater
- Eddie Constantine - Colonel Harris
- Jørgen Reenberg - Max Hartmann
- Benny Poulsen - Steleman
- Erno Müller - Seifert
- Dietrich Kuhlbrodt - Inspector
- Michael Phillip Simpson - Robins
- Holger Perfort - Mr. Ravenstein
- Anne Werner Thomsen - Mrs. Ravenstein
- Lars von Trier - Jew
- Baard Owe - Man With Papers
Style
Europa employs an experimental style of cinema, combining largely black and white visuals with occasional intrusions of colour having actors interact with rear-projected footage, and layering different images over one another to surreal effect. The voice-over narration uses an unconventional second-person narrative imitative of a hypnotist (e.g. "On the count of ten, you will be in Europa.").
The film's characters, music, dialogue, and plot are self-consciously melodramatic and ironically imitative of film noir conventions.
Production
The film was shot throughout Poland (Chojna Cathedral (Marienkirche) and the Chojna Roundhouse) and in Denmark (Nordisk Film studios, Copenhagen and the Copenhagen Dansk Hydraulisk Institut)
Von Trier's production company, Zentropa Entertainments, is named after the sinister railway network featured in this film, which is in turn named after the real-life train company Mitropa.
Release
Europa was released as Zentropa in North America to avoid confusion with Europa Europa (1990).
Reception
Europa received largely positive reviews, currently holding an 85% rating on review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes.[5]
Accolades
The film won three awards at the 1991 Cannes Film Festival (Best Artistic Contribution, Jury Prize, and Technical Grand Prize).[6] Upon realizing that he had not won the Palme d'Or, von Trier gave the judges the finger and stormed out of the venue.[7]
Home media
The Criterion Collection released the film on DVD in 2008. The package contained several documentaries on the film and an audio commentary from von Trier.
References
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External links
- Lua error in Module:WikidataCheck at line 28: attempt to index field 'wikibase' (a nil value). Europa at IMDb
- Europa at the TCM Movie Database
- Europa at Rotten Tomatoes
- Criterion Collection Essay by Howard Hampton
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- ↑ Lars Von Trier: Interviews, pp. 82-83
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- Pages with reference errors
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- 1991 films
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- 1990s drama films
- Danish films
- Danish avant-garde and experimental films
- Danish drama films
- French films
- French avant-garde and experimental films
- French drama films
- German films
- German avant-garde and experimental films
- German drama films
- Polish films
- Polish avant-garde and experimental films
- Polish drama films
- Swedish films
- Swedish avant-garde and experimental films
- Swedish drama films
- Swiss films
- Swiss avant-garde and experimental films
- Swiss drama films
- English-language films
- German-language films
- Films directed by Lars von Trier
- Art films
- Films set in Germany
- Films set in 1945
- Films set in 1946
- Films shot in Denmark
- Films shot in Poland
- Nazis in fiction
- Rail transport films