ORDET Director: CARL DREYER 126 minutes, Denmark, 1955, Subtitled, Black and White, D-Cinema Book cinema tickets Re-released to coincide with a season of the director’s films, for many this adaptation of Kaj Munk’s play about tensions within a Jutland farming family is the very greatest of all Carl Dreyer’s masterpieces. Old Morten Borgen fears God has abandoned him. Though he adores daughter-in-law Inger, he wishes she could restore her atheist husband to the family’s traditional beliefs; Anders, his youngest, wants to marry the daughter of a tailor who preaches a detestably puritanical Christianity; and his middle son Johannes now believes he’s Jesus. Far from the litany this brief character summary might suggest, Dreyer’s penultimate film is at once a wise, even witty exploration of pride, prejudice and pretensions to devout faith, and a heartrending hymn to the power of earthly passion and love. In contrast to the performances’ intimate naturalism, the exquisite lighting, camera movements, sets and sounds all add to the sense of a super-reality, strangely familiar yet informed by mysterious forces of dark, almost primal emotion. It’s a towering achievement. (Notes by Geoff Andrew.) This re-release coincides with the IFI’s season of Carl Dreyer’s greatest masterpieces throughout April. Director: CARL DREYER 126 minutes, Denmark, 1955, Subtitled, Black and White, D-Cinema