Carl Theodor Dreyer, Jr. (3
February 1889 – 20 March 1968) was a Danish
film director. He is regarded by many
critics and filmmakers as one of the greatest directors in
cinema.
Life
Dreyer was
born illegitimate in Copenhagen
, Denmark
. His
birth mother was an unmarried Swedish maid named Josefine
Bernhardine Nilsson, and he was put up for adoption by his birth
father, Jens Christian Torp, a farmer who was his mother's
employer. He spent the first two years of his life in orphanages
until his adoption by a typographer named Carl Theodor Dreyer, Sr.,
and his wife, Inger Marie (née Olsen). His
adoptive parents were strict
Lutherans and his childhood was largely unhappy.
But he was a highly intelligent school student, who left home and
formal education at the age of sixteen. He dissociated himself from
his adoptive family, but their teachings were to influence the
themes of many of his films.
Dreyer died of pneumonia in Copenhagen at age 79. The documentary
Carl Th.
Dreyer: My
Metier contains reminiscences from those who knew
him.
Career
As a young man, Dreyer worked as a
journalist, but he eventually joined the film
industry as a writer of title cards for silent films and
subsequently of screenplays. His first attempts at film direction
had limited success, and he left Denmark to work in the French film
industry. While living in France he mixed with
Jean Cocteau,
Jean
Hugo and other members of the French artistic scene and in
1928 he made his first classic film,
The Passion of Joan of
Arc. Working from the transcripts of Joan's trial, he
created a masterpiece of emotion that drew equally from realism and
expressionism. Dreyer used private finance from Baron
Nicolas de Gunzburg to make his next
film as the Danish film industry was in financial ruin.
Vampyr (
1932) is a surreal meditation on fear. Logic
gave way to mood and atmosphere in this story of a man protecting
two sisters from a vampire. The movie contains many indelible
images, such as the hero, played by de Gunzburg (under the screen
name Julian West), dreaming of his own burial and the animal blood
lust on the face of one of the sisters as she suffers under the
vampire's spell. The film was shot mostly silent but with sparse,
cryptic dialogue in three separate versions - English, French and
German.
Both films were box office failures, and Dreyer did not make
another movie until 1943. Denmark was by now under Nazi occupation,
and his
Day of Wrath had as
its theme the paranoia surrounding witch hunts in the sixteenth
century in a strongly
theocratic culture.
With this work, Dreyer established the style that would mark his
sound films: careful compositions, stark monochrome cinematography,
and very long takes. In the more than a decade before his next
full-length feature film, Dreyer made two documentaries. In 1955,
he made
Ordet (
The Word)
based on the play of the same name by
Kaj
Munk. The film combines a love story with a conflict of faith.
Dreyer's last film was 1964's
Gertrud. Although seen by some as a
lesser film than its predecessors, it is a fitting close to
Dreyer's career, as it deals with a woman who, through the
tribulations of her life, never expresses regret for her
choices.
The great, never finished project of Dreyer’s career was a film
about
Jesus. Though a manuscript was written
(published 1968) the unstable economic conditions and Dreyer’s own
demands of realism together with his switching engagement let it
remain a dream.
Filmography
Feature films
Short films
- Good Mothers (Mødrehjælpen, 12 min,
1942)
- Water from the Land (Vandet på landet,
1946)
- The Struggle Against Cancer (Kampen mod
kræften, 15 min, 1947)
- The Danish Village Church (Landsbykirken, 14
min, 1947)
- They Caught the Ferry (De nåede færgen, 11
min, 1948)
- Thorvaldsen (10 min, 1949)
- The Storstrom Bridge (Storstrømsbroen, 7 min,
1950)
- The Castle Within the Castle (Et Slot i et
slot, 1955)
References
External links