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Actresses who appeared with Lars von Trier on screen:

Nicole Kidman
Chloe Sevigny
Emily Watson
Bryce Dallas Howard
Lauren Bacall
Catherine Denueve
Catherine Deneuve
Bjork
Iben Hjejle
Siobhan Fallon
Alison Pill
Blair Brown
Alexandra Van-Der-Noot
Barbara Sukova
Sophie Graabol
Katrine Michelsen


Lars von Trier
Birthday: April 30, 1956

Birth Place: Copenhagen, Denmark
Height: 5' 7"

Below is a complete filmography (list of movies he's appeared in) for Lars von Trier. If you have any corrections or additions, please email us at corrections@actorsofhollywood.com. We'd also be interested in any trivia or other information you have.

 

Biography

With a back-story (almost) as singular as his films, Danish director Lars von Trier was one of the most exceptional filmmakers to burst onto the international film scene in the 1990s. Unapologetically confident in his artistry and an unabashed provocateur, von Trier could kick up a fuss about his behavior, but his stylistic brio, extreme narratives, and ability with actors prevented such films as Zentropa (1991), The Kingdom (1994), Breaking the Waves (1996), and Dancer in the Dark (2000) from being eclipsed by their creator. Even as he openly sought a larger audience by making films in English, von Trier's success helped resurrect Scandinavian cinema's international prominence; his intense fear of flying ensured he'd never "go Hollywood."Raised by his radical, nudist Communist parents in an unconventional environment where, as von Trier once put it, everything was permitted except "feelings, religion and enjoyment," von Trier blossomed into a neurotic, left-wing, movie-loving youth. Given a Super-8 camera at age 11, von Trier spent his teens making movies and entered Copenhagen's film school in the early '80s. After winning prizes at the Munich Film Festival in 1981 and 1982 for his student films, and adding the aristocratic "von" to his name, the 1983 graduate managed to put together his low-budget debut feature, The Element of Crime (1984). A highly stylized neo-noir cop thriller set in a sepia-toned, water-logged future, The Element of Crime attracted favorable notice at the Cannes Film Festival, winning a prize for technical achievement. Von Trier continued his feature trilogy about Europe with the reflexive thriller Epidemic (1987). Starring the director as a director trying to raise money to make the movie-within-a-movie about a horrific virus unleashed on contemporary Germany, Epidemic was a controlled stab at postmodernism that underlined von Trier's restless creativity even though it was not as well regarded. After a version of Medea (1988) for Danish television — presaging his 1990s focus on borderline women — von Trier completed his European trio with Europa (1991). A darkly comic drama set in post-WWII Germany, Europa dazzled viewers with its ambitious use of superimposition, rear projection, and dramatic shifts between black-and-white and color, definitively establishing von Trier's mastery of ominous atmospherics. Retitled Zentropa for its American release, Europa earned von Trier his first substantial international recognition as well as film festival notoriety. Disappointed by Europa's third place Special Jury Prize at Cannes, von Trier accepted his award with thanks to "the midget," jury chair Roman Polanski.Despite an array of publicized psychological problems, including crippling bouts of agoraphobia, von Trier continued to experiment and stretch his cinematic vision, announcing plans to make a film called Dimension, to be shot in three-minute increments over 30 years. While the results of that project remain to be seen, what von Trier made in the ensuing eight years vaulted him from cult status to bona fide directorial stardom. Turning his terror of hospitals into superb entertainment, von Trier mounted the chilling miniseries The Kingdom (1994) for Danish TV. Shot on location in a Copenhagen hospital in 16 mm with available light, The Kingdom was an inspired blend of Twin Peaks freakiness with ER procedural kineticism in its story of a haunted hospital. A TV and film festival hit, The Kingdom also became a precursor to the new aesthetic and spiritual concerns of von Trier's subsequent 1990s feature films. Embroiled in personal turmoil mid-decade, including his mother's 1995 deathbed revelation of his actual biological father (who wanted nothing to do with von Trier after an initial meeting), von Trier definitively rebelled against his past. Along with converting to Catholicism, von Trier broke from the perfectionist style of his Europe trilogy, aiming to achieve the "honesty" he admired in Danish iconoclast Carl Theodore Dreyer's work with his own self-imposed artistic "chastity." Co-authoring the Dogme 95 manifesto with fellow Dane Thomas Vinterberg, von Trier declared that Dogme-ites should reject artifice by only telling contemporary stories and only shooting films on location, in natural light, with a handheld camera, and with location sound.Though von Trier's next movie wasn't pure Dogme, it did reveal his altered perspective. Drawing on the tradition of florid melodrama that von Trier adored and his family had despised, as well as his newfound spirituality, Breaking the Waves (1996) became an international sensation. Broken up by vividly colored chapter "headings" created in collaboration with painter Pers Kirkeby, Breaking the Waves' disturbing story of female sacrifice and sexual martyrdom was lent dizzying immediacy by cinematographer Robby M

Movie Credits
Wasington (2007)
[ Udo Kier ]
Erik Nietzsche - de unge år (2006)
Direktøren for det hele (2006)
[ Jens Albinus ]
Manderlay (2005)
[ Willem Dafoe ][ John Hurt ][ Danny Glover ][ Jeremy Davies ][ Udo Kier ]
Dear Wendy (2005)
[ Bill Pullman ][ Jamie Bell ][ Michael Angarano ][ Mark Webber ]
Dogville: The Pilot (2003)
[ Jens Albinus ]
Fem benspænd, De (2003)
[ Patrick Bauchau ]
Dogville (2003)
[ Paul Bettany ][ Stellan Skarsgård ][ James Caan ][ John Hurt ][ Jeremy Davies ]
Dancer in the Dark (2000)
[ Stellan Skarsgård ][ Peter Stormare ][ David Morse ][ Udo Kier ][ Jens Albinus ]
Udstillede, De (2000)
Idioterne (1998)
[ Jens Albinus ]
Breaking the Waves (1996)
[ Stellan Skarsgård ][ Udo Kier ][ Elton John ][ Roef Ragas ]
Europa (1991)
[ Max von Sydow ][ Udo Kier ]
Medea (1988)
[ Udo Kier ]
Epidemic (1987)
[ Udo Kier ]
Forbrydelsens element (1984)
Befrielsesbilleder (1982)
Nocturne (1980)
Menthe - la bienheureuse (1979)
Orchidégartneren (1977)
Hvorfor flygte fra det du ved du ikke kan flygte fra? (1970)

Trivia

  • In 1995, his dying mother told her son on her deathbed that the man he believed was his father was, in fact, was not. Following her death, he tracked down his biological father, a 90-year-old man who after four combative meetings told him that, if he wanted to speak to him again, he could do it through his lawyer.
  • Broke up with his pregnant wife and moved in with their (much younger) babysitter. [1996]
  • Added 'von' to his name because his peers at the Danish Film School called him so.
  • Von Trier's mother, a civil service worker named Inger Høst, confessed shortly before her death that his real father was not Ulf Trier (another ministry worker) but rather her employer, Fritz Michael Hartmann; she explained she wanted a man with "artistic genes," and Hartmann, a member of an illustrious family of Danish composers including Johan Peter Emilius Hartmann and Niels Viggo Bentzon, seemed to fit the bill.
  • Nephew of filmmaker Børge Høst.
  • Helped form a collective known as Dogme 95 with a group of other filmmakers. The collective agreed to make films following certain rules, such as using only hand held cameras and shooting only on location.
  • The year von Trier won the Palme D'Or at the Cannes Film Festival, he almost did not attend the ceremony. He has so many phobias, he could only make the trip in a specially outfitted trailer.
  • Steven Spielberg offered him the chance to direct a film in America after he saw Europa (1991) but von Trier turned the script down.
  • He was awarded UNICEF's 'Cinema for Peace Award' at the 2004 Berlinale (Berlin International Film Festival). He got the award because almost all of his films deal with subjects like mercy and ethics.
  • He is working on a film project called Dimension, starring Udo Kier, taking a 3 minute shot every year around Christmas on different locations all over Europe over a period of 33 years. The project started back in 1991, so its premiere is expected to be in the year 2024.
  • He was scheduled to direct the four operas of Wagner's Ring at the 2006 edition of the Bayreuth Festival in Germany, but withdrew from the project in 2004 and stated through the festival that he felt that it would exceed his powers and that he did not feel able to fulfil his own ambitions.
  • Has never visited the US.
  • Added the "von" to his birth name (Lars Trier) as an homage to director Josef von Sternberg.

Naked Photos of Lars von Trier are available at MaleStars.com. They currently feature over 65,000 Nude Pics, Biographies, Video Clips, Articles, and Movie Reviews of famous stars.

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