A farmer’s family is torn apart by faith, sanctity, and love—one child believes he’s Jesus Christ, a second proclaims himself agnostic, and the third falls in love with a fundamentalist’s daughter. Putting the lie to the term “organized religion,” Ordet (The Word) is a challenge to simple facts and dogmatic orthodoxy. Layering multiple stories of faith and rebellion, Dreyer’s adaptation of Kaj Munk’s play quietly builds towards a shattering, miraculous climax. —The Criterion Collection
Carl Theodor Dreyer was born out of wedlock to a Swedish housekeeper, Josefina Nilsson (1855-1891), who gave him up for adoption immediately after. The first year and a half of his life was turbulent, but the little boy finally found a home with the Dreyer family and was named Carl Theodor after his adoptive father. Dreyer’s birth mother died not long after his eventual adoption. Several film scholars have interpreted Dreyer’s frequent depictions of tragic women as an autobiographical element in his films.
Dreyer began his career as a reporter, specialising in aviation early on, in 1910-1913. Himself an active balloonist, he got a balloonist’s certificate in November 1911. Alongside his journalism, he wrote screenplays. His first realised script was Bryggerens Datter (Dagmar) (Rasmus Ottesen, 1912), produced by Det Skandinavisk-russiske Handelshus. In 1913-1918, he worked as a script consultant and writer at Nordisk Film, where he also made his directorial debut… read more
The only children who they do believe and have utter faith, Christianity nor paganism fathers made me laugh loud enough when they are next to each other at the survival of the dying mother at the end. Truly honest truth about faith from Dreyer, reminds me a lot of Bergman's Winter light ......9/10
I can tell that I began watching Ordet on the wrong foot. Twenty minutes into the film and I couldn't shake the biased expectation of an intense Bergman drama. All the ingredients were there, but when it didn't happen I was very disappointed. Looking back, perhaps I should have watched it as if it were a black and white stained glass image in motion. Strange that my memory of Ordet is more powerful than 1st viewing
Bendtsen and Dreyer on the set of Gertrud (DFI); Ordet "Danish cinematographer Henning Bendtsen — whose career stretched from the 1940s
The Brooklyn Academy of Music is running a Carl Th. Dreyer retrospective, appropriately and monolithically titled DREYER, from March 13 - March
Above: The Bride of Glomdale (1926). Image courtesy of The Danish Film Institute/Stills & Posters Archive. Almost all early Carl Th
The Brooklyn Academy of Music will be running the Carl Th. Dreyer retrospective, appropriately and monolithically titled DREYER, from March 13
The Brooklyn Academy of Music will be running the Carl Th. Dreyer retrospective, appropriately and monolithically titled DREYER, from March 13
The Brooklyn Academy of Music will be running the Carl Th. Dreyer retrospective, appropriately and monolithically titled DREYER, from
The Brooklyn Academy of Music will be running the Carl Th. Dreyer retrospective, appropriately and monolithically titled DREYER, from
Above: The Master, Carl Th. Dreyer. *** The Brooklyn Academy of Music will be running a Carl Th. Dreyer retrospective, appropriately and
The only Carl Dreyer film I’ve seen other than Ordet was Joan of Arc (which was more or less a painful experience), but this film makes it up for me. The only annoyance I have with these spiritual… read review
Ordet (directed by Carl Theodore Dreyer) seems to pop up on a lot of people’s “greatest films” lists. I’m not exactly sure where I’d first seen it promoted; it may have been Jonathan Rosenbaum’s Top… read review