| Index | 7 reviews in total |
5 out of 5 people found the following review useful:
film about the mistakes in love repeated from one generation to another., 19 January 2004
![]()
Author:
Sorsimus from Kaarina, Finland
Praesidenten is a film about the crucial conflict between the (conservative)
codes of society and individual moral.
It tells the story of a grandfather, father and son of a well respected
family who all make the same mistake and fall in love with a common
girl.
They all have to resolve the problem in a way acceptable to the society they
live in but must consequently suffer the inner guilt that inevitably
follows.
Finally, late in his life the son, whose a respected judge in a small town,
gets a chance to redeem himself and his ancestors by doing the right thing
morally but also severely breaking the law in doing so.
This highlights the conflict between the personal and the societal spheres
of right and wrong in a spectacular way, especially as Dreyer depicts the
other local men of power as only concerned with how the incident would
affect their status in society.
Dreyer uses flashback- structure in a very efficient and economical way to
build the comparisons between the different times portrayed in the film.
Furthermore: in this our digital age of fast editing and overflow of image
it is most gratifying to see a film that has a complex point to make and
manages to do that almost effortlessly with a minimum of "hassle". The
direction is so economic it almost hides the mastery of cinematic vision
behind it to the untrained eye.
2 out of 2 people found the following review useful:
Danish blue-blood mellerdrammer, 18 March 2009
![]()
Author:
F Gwynplaine MacIntyre from Minffordd, North Wales
This film by Carl Dreyer is titled 'The President' in the old-fashioned
European sense of the word 'president': the title character is the
presiding official of a European town; not quite the mayor, nor quite
the chief magistrate. Like its title, this entire film is very much a
product of the fading days of imperial Europe. The film's premise takes
it for granted that aristocratic noblemen are somehow innately
different from the common folk, with a different set of priorities, a
different set of duties, and a different form of justice.
The film is set in 19th-century Denmark. The main plot is some hoo-ha
about a greying blue-blood (Halvard Hoff) who must preside over the
trial and sentence of a young governess (Olga Raphael-Linden) accused
of murdering the child in her charge. The governess pleads guilty, but
for some reason she's going to be put on trial anyway. (I know nothing
about 19th-century Danish law; would a defendant who pleads guilty to a
capital offence be made to stand trial?) The president abruptly learns
that the governess is his own daughter, born of a tryst with a
working-class woman whom he didn't marry due to their social disparity.
Naturally, because this total stranger is his own daughter he must now
intercede. What follows is mostly deepest bathos.
The action of this sprawling movie takes place over three generations.
Two of the actors in this film (Hoff and Elith Pio) each play their
characters at two radically different ages; unfortunately, the old-age
makeup on these two young actors is very unconvincing. Also
unconvincing is the hairpiece worn by Richard Christensen (the best
actor in this film) as the governess's defence advocate. I was
distressed that Christensen bears a striking resemblance to Michael
Palin. Talking of makeup: the governess wears lip rouge in her death
cell.
Whoever handled the set dressing on this movie should have cut down on
the caffeine: one character's home is decorated with dozens of
silhouette portraits, while another character's home is festooned with
miniatures arranged in geometric patterns. The keys for the cells in
the local prison are hung on a wall-rack shaped like a bat; it looks
like it would have been more appropriate in Dreyer's film 'Vampyr'. One
shot in this movie, depicting a servant seen only in shadow, reminded
me of a famous shot in 'Vampyr'.
In all the long length of 'The President', Dreyer's camera hardly ever
moves and always does so clumsily. Fortunately, Dreyer's static camera
gives us some strikingly beautiful compositions. All of his exteriors
are exquisitely framed and lighted. (I wonder if he used reflectors.) A
few brief sequences are rather obviously shot day-for-night. I was
impressed by one shot when lovers meet on a bridge; we see their
reflections in the water rather than the lovers themselves.
There are a few weird lapses here. One character wears spectacles in
medium-long shot, then Dreyer cuts to him in close-up and the
spectacles are gone. The president's cook carries live terriers in a
closed satchel with no airholes, to no ill effect. The cook is played
by Fanny Petersen, who strongly resembles Beryl Mercer, one of the most
annoying actresses in film history.
'The President' has many flaws, most notably a turgid and overly
complicated storyline. However, Dreyer's directorial skill is manifest
here, and most of his actors give good performances. I'll rate this
deeply old-fashioned movie 6 out of 10.
1 out of 1 people found the following review useful:
The Birth of a Master, 18 January 2009
![]()
Author:
rotildao from UK
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
First baby delivered by the hands of one the greatest film directors of
all times; Praesidenten (or The Judge) is simply well nurtured and
cared, and certainly less painful and shorter than the real experience
of giving birth.
An intricate story well told and filled with tenderness in its images.
The symbolism and metaphors are not as present as in Dreyer's later
films, still the right pacing and astonishing photography are
nevertheless remarkable which would be a constant aspect in his work.
The story is universal and in some ways follows the moral
characteristics of Victor Hugo's work, such as redemption. The old
family's traditions and values that are always put in question upon
society as a whole are always being dealt generation through
generation, and that's what Dreyer keep reminding us, ever.
The film is far from being Dreyer's greatest work, but leaves no doubt
as far as his passion and dedication for minor details, enriching this
beautiful art right from the start till finish.
Dreyer's opera prima, 12 November 2011
Author:
Edgar SoberĂ³n Torchia (estorchia@gmail.com) from Panama
"The President", known as Carl Theodor Dreyer's first feature-length film, includes a trial scene, solved in a traditional way, a strong contrast with his famous masterpiece "Passion of Jeanne d'Arc". In general, the "mise-en-caméra" is rather conventional, except for a couple of shots, both related to romantic situations in which the filmmaker was "inspired": one is a overhead shot of a kiss, the other two lovers' reunion on a bridge reflected on a pond. There are a few silly distracting shots dealing with puppies; one or two inserts seemingly erroneous, but in any case, it is an enjoyable viewing, and Dreyer's ethical considerations and spiritual leaning which reached a sublime level in "Ordet"- are already sketched here.
A cinematographic exercise in painterly style, 28 April 2011
![]()
Author:
sveinpa
This film is very interesting for various reasons. I will here look
briefly at its style, which was explicitly made by Dreyer (confirmed in
a letter to Erik Ulrichsen 11th March 1958, now in the Danish Film
Museum) to make the interiors reflect the characters. For this, he
modeled the sets after paintings by Vilhelm Hammershøi and James
Whistler. This is very apparent if one looks at Whistler's portrait of
his Mother against a gray wall, and the many Hammershøi paintings where
he balances the model(s) also against gray, cool blue or white walls
decorated with a few small portraits strictly arranged. I would also
like to add that a lot of the white faces and hands, which Dreyer often
frames in almost complete darkness, reminds me of how the graphic work
by Edvard Munch can make any face look like a premature death mask.
There is certainly in this film much interplay between the Nordic
darkness of the soul and the barren interiors of the late aristocracy.
These arrangements make the film appear as a well thought out study of
how to balance painterly and cinematographic style. However, many of
these carefully constructed scenes are very short. I would assume that
longer takes would make for a very much more beautiful and
contemplative film, but alas it would also slow down the hectic and
melodramatic plot, which just gets more frantic with each scene, ending
in a tour de force of cross cutting a la Griffith. So in a way the plot
kills the style. Oh well.
The current version was created in 1999 from the original nitrate
negative and released on DVD in 2004 by the Danish Film Institute. It
is tinted in amber, blue and red. Compared with film stills I have seen
in black and white, the DVD looks very dark. For example the scene when
Karl Victor reads the letter informing him that it is his daughter that
will be prosecuted for infanticide, the wallpaper behind him is
completely obscured, making the white passepartout framing the portrait
on the wall shine in the darkness. In the still of the same scene you
can clearly see the pattern in the wallpaper around the picture, making
the whole scene more naturally lighted. Since the lightning in the film
as a whole is full of dark imagery, this loss of detail makes the film
look more expressionistic and gloomy than originally intended. Of
course, that might only make it more interesting for fans of Nosferatu,
Vampyr and other Gothic nightmares. But Præsidenten is not a Gothic
tale, but rather a moral melodrama typical of its time, with echoes of
Ibsen, Strindberg and Söderberg (writer of Gertrud). But as seen in the
current version, it certainly looks Gothic - and some might find its
charm just because of that.
3 out of 7 people found the following review useful:
Great Early Dreyer Film, 8 May 2006
![]()
Author:
FerdinandVonGalitzien (FerdinandVonGalitzien@gmail.com) from Galiza
"Praesidenten" is the first film of the great Danish film director Carl
Theodor Dreyer and, for this German count, this debut is a perfect
example of Dreyer's film style. It's one, with degrees of variation, he
would maintain in his silent films as well as in his talkie career.
"Praesidenten" is a film perfectly constructed (the film is divided
into three different but interrelated parts). Flashbacks are used to
depict the terrible story of Danish noblemen who dare to fall in love
with common girls; such huge mistakes will have serious consequences
for the main characters
as Herr Von Sendlingen says to his son at the
beginning of the film, "never marry a commoner, for no good ever comes
of it, naught but curses and remorse
"
ah, wise words, indeed!.
"Praesidenten", besides having a solid and narrative film structure
very well rendered, has an elegantly slow pace, this is very
characteristic in Herr Dreyer's films, film cadences and pauses endow
the story with intensity and emotive nature, showing the vicissitudes
of three generations of a family broken due to impossible or imprudent
relationships. When at the end of the film the main character has the
opportunity to atone his sins and make amends with the past, he finally
carries the burden of stricter convictions and codes of honor.
"Praesidenten" is a solid debut, one with graceful and delicate pacing
a perfect example of the Herr Dreyer oeuvre.
And now, if you'll allow me, I must temporarily take my leave because
this German Count, as President of the "Associated Aristocrats
Foundation" must attend another decadent meeting.
Herr Graf Ferdinand Von Galitzien
4 out of 9 people found the following review useful:
Freudian comeuppance, 5 March 2007
![]()
Author:
Mart Sander from www.martsander.com
Dreyer himself was a child born out of wedlock and given to adoption by
an unwed woman who died soon thereafter. No wonder the sufferings of a
woman are the marrow of many of his films.
The Danish woman is widely considered to be a rather high-spirited and
free-minded creature. There are several films in the series issued by
the Danish Film Intitute which show how women take things in their own
hands, choose their men, inflict revenge upon them. But that is not the
case in Præsidenten. This is a full blown melodrama about the constant
sufferings of women, generation after generation. A pretty outdated
concept by 1919 standards, and a pretty moralizing version of the
eternal story of men taking advantage of women, having their way with
them and abandoning them. There's a lot of honor and duty involved int
the style of a proper Gilbert and Sullivan operetta, but unlike G&S,
the film takes itself much too seriously. There are some highly
unmotivated actions and a very, very weird scene, that seems to be
either totally butchered or else the Danes lacked the knowledge of how
babies are born completely - the barely pregnant governess is driven
into the night, she collapses in the woods... and the next morning she
is found lying there with the dead child by her side! So naturally she
is blamed with infanticide at once. I don't know how exactly, but I
find it hard to believe that reproduction worked like that. There's
also a lot of bad make-up as all the young men also play themselves in
their ripe years, so overall the results aren't very convincing. A
somewhat tedious production, but worthy a viewing.
| Plot summary | Ratings | External reviews |
| Plot keywords | Main details | Your user reviews |
| Your vote history |