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.
- Awards
- 7 wins & 2 nominations total
Henrik Malberg
- Morten Borgen
- (uncredited)
Emil Hass Christensen
- Mikkel Borgen
- (uncredited)
Preben Lerdorff Rye
- Johannes Borgen
- (uncredited)
Hanne Aagesen
- Karen
- (uncredited)
Sylvia Eckhausen
- Kirstin Petersen
- (uncredited)
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)
Susanne Rud
- Lilleinger Borgen
- (uncredited)
Henry Skjær
- The Doctor
- (uncredited)
Edith Trane
- Mette Maren
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaThe 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.
- ConnectionsEdited into Histoire(s) du cinéma: Une histoire seule (1989)
Featured review
Others have reviewed this picture in a more scholarly and contextual manner than I can, so I will only endeavor to add the following:
I have a particular interest in the nature of faith, and undertook to view Ordet as something "good for me," but probably arduous. Wrong! I also grew up in an area heavily populated by Scandinavians, and knew immigrants who were contemporaries of the oldest characters in the picture.
Ordet, set in 1925, is a dead-on take of old-school Scandinavian culture, suffused with both the most intense dramatic elements imaginable and moments of comic relief as well. The action moves right along without help of special effects or a distracting musical score.
This picture at least alludes to the seldom-asked question, "Why do people believe?" Is it merely for the rewards of faithfulness, or something more?
The final scene, utterly devoid of effects or music, has a dramatic power unexcelled in the ensuing 47 years of cinema to date. It is very long, but uses its duration in service of the tension of the story. Nobody is yelling, fighting or firing weapons, despite the fact they are enduring emotional torment that is as painful as it gets.
In an oblique way, the scene reminded me of the part of Jim Jarmusch's "Down By Law" where Tom Waits and Co. are sitting in the clink in real time, and time passes glacially in one very long scene, illustrating the sheer boredom of incarcerated life. Here real time is used to illustrate the unrelenting nature of grief. In both cases we see what happens long after the scene would have changed in nearly any other picture. The pace conforms plausibly with real life, and in so doing serves the dramatic tension.
One negative review alludes to the final shot and the expression in a character's eyes. I would defend that as an insight that no blessing is unmixed.
As others have noted, one needn't hold a Christian point of view to enjoy this film and be given much to ponder. See it.
I have a particular interest in the nature of faith, and undertook to view Ordet as something "good for me," but probably arduous. Wrong! I also grew up in an area heavily populated by Scandinavians, and knew immigrants who were contemporaries of the oldest characters in the picture.
Ordet, set in 1925, is a dead-on take of old-school Scandinavian culture, suffused with both the most intense dramatic elements imaginable and moments of comic relief as well. The action moves right along without help of special effects or a distracting musical score.
This picture at least alludes to the seldom-asked question, "Why do people believe?" Is it merely for the rewards of faithfulness, or something more?
The final scene, utterly devoid of effects or music, has a dramatic power unexcelled in the ensuing 47 years of cinema to date. It is very long, but uses its duration in service of the tension of the story. Nobody is yelling, fighting or firing weapons, despite the fact they are enduring emotional torment that is as painful as it gets.
In an oblique way, the scene reminded me of the part of Jim Jarmusch's "Down By Law" where Tom Waits and Co. are sitting in the clink in real time, and time passes glacially in one very long scene, illustrating the sheer boredom of incarcerated life. Here real time is used to illustrate the unrelenting nature of grief. In both cases we see what happens long after the scene would have changed in nearly any other picture. The pace conforms plausibly with real life, and in so doing serves the dramatic tension.
One negative review alludes to the final shot and the expression in a character's eyes. I would defend that as an insight that no blessing is unmixed.
As others have noted, one needn't hold a Christian point of view to enjoy this film and be given much to ponder. See it.
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- The Word
- Filming locations
- Husby Klit, Vedersø, Ringkøbing-Skjern, Midtjylland, Denmark(Borgensgaard farm and dunes)
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime2 hours 6 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
- 1.66 : 1
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