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Ordet

  • 1955
  • Not Rated
  • 2h 6m
IMDb RATING
8.2/10
18K
YOUR RATING
Ordet (1955)
Watch Trailer [English SUB]
Play trailer2:01
1 Video
26 Photos
Drama

Follows the lives of the Borgen family, as they deal with inner conflict, as well as religious conflict with each other, and the rest of the town.Follows the lives of the Borgen family, as they deal with inner conflict, as well as religious conflict with each other, and the rest of the town.Follows the lives of the Borgen family, as they deal with inner conflict, as well as religious conflict with each other, and the rest of the town.

  • Director
    • Carl Theodor Dreyer
  • Writers
    • Kaj Munk
    • Carl Theodor Dreyer
  • Stars
    • Henrik Malberg
    • Emil Hass Christensen
    • Preben Lerdorff Rye
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    8.2/10
    18K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Carl Theodor Dreyer
    • Writers
      • Kaj Munk
      • Carl Theodor Dreyer
    • Stars
      • Henrik Malberg
      • Emil Hass Christensen
      • Preben Lerdorff Rye
    • 83User reviews
    • 49Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 7 wins & 2 nominations total

    Videos1

    Trailer [English SUB]
    Trailer 2:01
    Trailer [English SUB]

    Photos26

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    Top cast15

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    Henrik Malberg
    • Morten Borgen
    • (uncredited)
    Emil Hass Christensen
    • Mikkel Borgen
    • (uncredited)
    Preben Lerdorff Rye
    • Johannes Borgen
    • (uncredited)
    Hanne Aagesen
    • Karen
    • (uncredited)
    Kirsten Andreasen
      Sylvia Eckhausen
      • Kirstin Petersen
      • (uncredited)
      Birgitte Federspiel
      Birgitte Federspiel
      • Inger Borgen
      • (uncredited)
      Ejner Federspiel
      • Peter Petersen
      • (uncredited)
      Ann Elisabeth Groth
      • Maren Borgen
      • (uncredited)
      Cay Kristiansen
      • Anders Borgen
      • (uncredited)
      Gerda Nielsen
      • Anne Petersen
      • (uncredited)
      Ove Rud
      • Pastor
      • (uncredited)
      Susanne Rud
      • Lilleinger Borgen
      • (uncredited)
      Henry Skjær
      • The Doctor
      • (uncredited)
      Edith Trane
      • Mette Maren
      • (uncredited)
      • Director
        • Carl Theodor Dreyer
      • Writers
        • Kaj Munk
        • Carl Theodor Dreyer
      • All cast & crew
      • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

      User reviews83

      8.218.3K
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      Featured reviews

      8lindalovesthesea

      What a gem!

      Subtly suspenseful. Thought-provoking. Unpredictable--there's nothing cliché about this film. The long, single shot scenes are a very refreshing change of pace and help build intrigue. I loved it! I confess I had never even heard of this film until tonight while watching it on TCM. What a gem! Although it seems to get off to a slow start, it gains momentum. You find yourself intrigued by each family member's personal dilemma. Surprisingly, nothing turns out the way you expect it to! It's like that favorite good book you can't put down. On a sour note, I was very disturbed by a scene when the town doctor is called to the farm to aid Inger's midwife during childbirth. I'd like to do some research and learn if the director was true to the medical practices of the time.
      8sol-kay

      Miracles don't happen anymore?

      (Some Spoilers) Simple but powerful film about faith and how it can not only bring two warring families together but even bring someone back from the dead. If the belief in God by those close to him is strong enough.

      Having lost his faith in God a long time ago Morten Borgen, Henrik Malberg,attends church services more out of tradition then belief. Morten also seems to have influenced his older son Mikkel,Emil Hass Christensen, over the years with his semi-agnostic ideas as well. Being married to Inger, Brigitte Fedenspiel, Mikkel is a sweet and loving husband and father to both Inger and their little daughter Maren, Anne Elisabeth. Still he gets very up tight when talk about religion comes up at home. Mikkel also very upset and embarrassed about his younger brother John, Preben Leerdorff Rey,who's suffering from burn-out. That resulted from his time in college studying religion writings and theories.

      John has become convinced over time that he's Jesus Christ and goes around the house and countryside quoting phrases from the Bibel like an Old, or New, Testament prophet. Morten's youngest son Anders Cay Krisiansen, has fallen in love with the local Tailor's Peter Skraedder, Ejner Federspiel,daughter Anne, Greda Nielson. With the help of Morten's daughter-in-law Inger there's a meeting arranged between the two fathers to get Peter's permission to have Anne marry Anders. the meeting turns into a total disaster with Peter wanting nothing to do with Morten and his son Anders.

      The two, Peter and Morten, have been having sharp differences on religious issues for years and they really came into focus later on in the movie with Inger who was pregnant at the time. With Morten at his home Peter gets a call from Mikkel about Inger being very ill as she's about to give birth. Peter starts to feel that now his friend Morten will be tested by God like the Biblical Job. By having Inger die and having him accept what happens to her without any show of anger on his part to show his complete faith in God's work which is to test Morten.This unfeeling statement by Peter causes an angry and outraged Morten to almost clobber, and end up on nonspeaking terms with, him and end their friendship. At first Inger seems to be coming out of danger but later, after losing her baby, she just closes her eyes and stops breathing and peacefully passes away.

      Inger's death causes Peter to feel a deep guilt by practically telling Morten that he hoped that she'd dies. At the same time Peter leaves Morten so depressed in almost wanting to die himself. Mikkel also is at the point of having an emotional breakdown at Inger's wake not wanting to leave her side and preventing her coffin to be closed so sher could be buried in her eternal resting place.

      John, who was gone all this time, appears and with only young Meren believing him in his assertion that faith in God is the only force that can bring Inger back to life. If those who are now grieving for her showed that faith during her illness, instead of faith in modern medicine, this tragedy would not have happened. John then not only does the impossible but shows everyone there that he wasn't the unstable and irrational parson that they all thought that he was all these years. In fact he was a man of deep faith and conviction in God who never wavered in his strong and unshakable beliefs. No matter how hard they were tested by the events spinning around him.

      Slow paced film that has an underlying and invisible force to it that doesn't really show itself until well into the movie. John who we all thought was somewhat mad is the person brings everyone in the movie together by making them realize that there is a God and the real proof of his existence is all around us. If we just take the time and effort to look.
      federovsky

      Go over there, stand still, speak lines

      Time for my annual dose of Dreyer, taken like medicine. Is it fair that Dreyer has a reputation of being turgid, slow, archaic, depressing, theatrical? Well, yes. Look at this. A large part of the time is spent watching people walk slowly from one side of the room to the other. In fact, this seems to be Dreyer's main directorial idea because the rest of the time they just stand there like hatstands. At climactic moments a door may be opened. There is no attempt to vary pace or tone; the dialogue is as stilted as silent movie cards. In fact, this looked and felt like a film made in 1915, not 1955.

      The film presents a Danish society so insular that subtle shades of Christianity tear them apart. That might be interesting if treated with any sort of subtlety or depth. Not here, where the plot is built with a few huge stone bricks. And we have not one but two of the most morose characters in all cinema. Old Borgen, who has the lion's share of the dialogue, always stares fixedly into the middle-distance while speaking - I presumed he was reading his lines off a card.

      Dreyer is a man entirely without humour. The mad son Johannes looks like Rasputin with slicked down hair and an immaculate centre-parting; he thinks he is Christ and walks in and out slowly spouting religious twaddle in a high pitched monotone with no facial movement whatsoever. Perhaps Dreyer was paying homage to Ed Wood here. Johannes' every appearance is unintentionally hilarious. If he can't see this, Dreyer really must have something missing. If you're not laughing at Johannes yourself every time he appears, I'm not sure I want to know you.

      And never have I been so let down by the ending of a film. A literal deus ex machina that I simply found intellectually offensive - all the more so because we can see it coming a long way back but are still led at snail's pace towards it.

      Painfully sincere, and good for the soul maybe, but woefully unaccomplished. To be enjoyed only by Quakers.
      10inilopez

      Living a film

      First, I must say I don't write in English very well. I study English, a little bit, in the school. I speak and write usually in Spanish and Basque. Well, I think this is one of the best movies I've ever seen. Johannes is a magnificent character and two scenes with Johannes and his nephew, talking about nephew's mother... are great. The story is about life, dead, love, faith and a lot of "people's problems" At the end, is a story about the meaning of life. I like movies. Love stories, westerns, "film noir", adventures films... but occasionally you can see a movie like this that makes you love this art too much. You're not seeing a film, you're living the film. Wonderful. Absolutely wonderful.
      9aroth15

      Sublimely Affecting Film

      Well, I grew up in a religious home, and I was religious until around 22. I've been an atheist since then, and I had a very hard struggle to leave the religious world. I generally have very little patience with people who really believe in God and other such nonsense and fairy tales. But this film left me breathless, and I don't know why. Interestingly enough, when I heard all the quotes that Windfoot mentions, I wasn't very impressed with them, because they are all basically platitudes, trite expressions and homilies that every kid learns to parrot, religious or not. I felt that all those commonplace ideas like goodness, and kindness, and ethics are ordinary human values, which even a person who is not religious believes. But miracles, revelation, and such are, of course, completely different. The ending of the film was so affecting to me. Partly I think it is because the direction and stylization of the miracle is so honest and unencumbered by the juvenile and silly "special effects" that we have come to expect so often. The way that Dreyer presents the lives of these people--simple, honest, genuine, is so different from most everything we see today. True--there was primitive inhumanity displayed, in the refusal of both fathers to agree to a genuine love match between their children. This was very upsetting. All I could think was--"What would Jesus Christ have said to these two old unfeeling men, who were refusing to allow their children to marry--in the name of a religion based supposedly on love??" Only after Inger dies do they both realize how important love is, in a world callous and unfeeling. The film could conceivably have ended at that point, and it would have been a beautiful, albeit somewhat hackneyed story. Don't forget that the point of the miracle is to illustrate what Johannes (John) claims: That everyone there claims they are religious, but they don't really believe. If they would, they could bring Inger back to life. I am rambling....I really do not understand why this film had such an impact on me. I think it took courage for a filmmaker to go the way he did. Everyone, I suspect, would be tempted to laugh at the ending. I honestly don't know why I didn't. Maybe because it was presented so honestly, without all the trappings of wealth and power that accompany most religious culture, whether Jewish or Christian. But I do think that the film must have a very different meaning for someone who is really religious, believes in God, from the one it had for me. I'm still thinking about what it meant for me, and trying to figure it out. I just saw the film for the first time (Thank you, TCM). More comments maybe later.

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      Storyline

      Edit

      Did you know

      Edit
      • Trivia
        The actress who plays Inger had the audio of herself in labor and it was used during the difficult birth scene in the movie.
      • Quotes

        Inger Borgen: I believe a lot of little miracles happen secretly.

      • Connections
        Edited into Histoire(s) du cinéma: Une histoire seule (1989)

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      Details

      Edit
      • Release date
        • January 10, 1955 (Denmark)
      • Country of origin
        • Denmark
      • Language
        • Danish
      • Also known as
        • The Word
      • Filming locations
        • Husby Klit, Vedersø, Ringkøbing-Skjern, Midtjylland, Denmark(Borgensgaard farm and dunes)
      • Production company
        • Palladium Film
      • See more company credits at IMDbPro

      Tech specs

      Edit
      • Runtime
        2 hours 6 minutes
      • Color
        • Black and White
      • Sound mix
        • Mono
      • Aspect ratio
        • 1.37 : 1
        • 1.66 : 1

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