Antichrist

2009 Horror

This enormously controversial psychodrama-cum-horror film from Danish enfant terrible Lars von Trier charts the degeneration of a marriage into apocalyptic violence, chaos, and insanity following an unthinkable domestic tragedy. The film opens with a prologue. While they make love in their apartment on a snowy winter afternoon, a husband and wife known only as "He" and "She" (Willem Dafoe and Charlotte Gainsbourg) fail to keep an eye on their young toddler. In a horrific turn of events, the child wanders over to an open window, entranced by the snow cascading down, and falls two stories to his death. Von Trier then divides the remainder of the film into four chapters, beginning with "Grief." In that segment, the woman finishes a month's hospitalization, and accuses her husband of apathy over the child's death, but proceeds to take responsibility for it herself; he calmly and rationally guides her through this process. In the second segment, "Pain," she confesses to him that she's most terrified of their property in the forest, because she spent time with her son there over the preceding summer; as a form of therapy, he takes her to that locale on a wilderness retreat. She appears to grow more calm and rational over their first days in that milieu. Yet the recovery, it seems, was only illusory, and the subsequent two chapters, "Despair (Gynocide)" and "The Three Beggars," depict the woman's shocking and abrupt regression into unbridled insanity, culminating with grotesque sexual violence against herself, gruesome acts of destruction against her husband, and an apocalyptic climax. more..

Director: Lars von Trier

Starring: Charlotte Gainsbourg, Willem Dafoe

Reviews

  • Like a nightmare you recall during waking hours, and then only in its vast outlines, Antichrist has the power to haunt beyond words. For better and for worse, it is exactly the movie von Trier wanted to make and a piece of staggeringly pure cinema.

    Ty Burr - The Boston Globe

    26 April 2013

  • By turns repellent, powerful and ludicrous, Antichrist piles horror on horror with pitiless passion.

    Joe Morgenstern - The Wall Street Journal

    26 April 2013

  • Visually gorgeous to a fault and teeming with grandiose if often fascinating ideas that overwhelm the modest story that serves as their vehicle, this may be the least artistically successful film von Trier has ever made.

    - The Hollywood Reporter

    26 April 2013

  • For a hymn to panic and hostility, the movie is curiously artful. But only the most sympathetic viewers will find that its poetry outweighs its belligerence.

    Mark Jenkins - NPR

    26 April 2013

  • The trouble is, it's all too exhibitionistic to ring true. The impotent folly of Antichrist is that von Trier has made it his mission to shock the bourgeoisie in an era when they can no longer be shocked.

    Owen Gleiberman - Entertainment Weekly

    26 April 2013

Awards

  • Best Actor (Bedste mandlige hovedrolle)

    Bodil Awards (2010)

  • Charlotte Gainsbourg

    Cannes Film Festival (2009)

  • Best Actress

    Central Ohio Film Critics Association (2010)

  • Best Actress

    Chlotrudis Awards (2010)

     
  • Best Cinematographer

    European Film Awards (2009)