BRYCE DALLAS HOWARD IS READY FOR HER BEATDOWN

By in News
on Friday, April 22nd, 2005

When Lars von Trier’s Dogville screened in competition at Cannes two years ago, some members of the American press, most notably Variety‘s Todd McCarthy, took the naughty Dane’s anti-American’s potshots rather personally. This week, the festival announced that Manderlay, the second installment in the director’s “American Trilogy” would be making its way to the Croisette next month.

According to the film’s website, Manderlay picks up where Dogville left off. This time, our erstwhile 1930′s heroine Grace (played by Bryce Dallas Howard, daughter of Ron Howard, who took on the role after Nicole Kidman dropped out), discovers a town in Alabama where people have been living as if slavery had never been abolished. She then decides to make things right. While I haven’t seen the film, I’ve got a pretty good idea of what von Trier likes to do to people with good intentions, especially when they’re dealing with “Americans,” so I’m keeping my fingers crosses for poor Grace. (Will she ever learn?)

After watching the film’s trailer, in which John Hurt soberly intones the different classifications of “nigger” over shots of Danny Glover and Isaach De Bankole, among others, I can only imagine what McCarthy is going to say about this one.
.

You can follow any follow up comments to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed.

  • Matthew

    Isn’t Manderlay the second film in von Trier’s “U.S.A Trilogy”? I believe both it and Dogville are to be followed by a film called Wasington.

    Dancer in the Dark was the final film in a trilogy that included (I think) Breaking the Waves and The Idiots.

VOD CALENDAR

Filmmaker's curated calendar of the latest video on demand titles.
Contagion The Guard Hell And Back Again
See the VOD Calendar →
Filmmaker's Best Of 2011

Entries (RSS) and Comments (RSS)

The Filmmaker Magazine Blog is powered by WordPress.org.