The Passion of Carl Dreyer opens tomorrow at BFI Southbank in London and runs through March 23. The complete retrospective will not only feature rarely screened early works such as the newly restored melodrama The President (1919) but also an extended run of what many deem to be Dreyer's best, Ordet (The Word, 1955) — indeed, for Jonathan Rosenbaum, it remains "one of the greatest of all films," period.
The British Film Institute is kindly making a copy of its release of Ordet on DVD available to one of the lucky souls who can answer this question: What's the name of the cinema Dreyer ran in Copenhagen?
Even if the name's not on the tip of your tongue, it shouldn't be too hard to dig up, which is why we're going to have to choose a winner at random from all those who answer correctly. It'll be worth the dig: the BFI edition of...
The British Film Institute is kindly making a copy of its release of Ordet on DVD available to one of the lucky souls who can answer this question: What's the name of the cinema Dreyer ran in Copenhagen?
Even if the name's not on the tip of your tongue, it shouldn't be too hard to dig up, which is why we're going to have to choose a winner at random from all those who answer correctly. It'll be worth the dig: the BFI edition of...
- 2/29/2012
- MUBI
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