Monday, June 25, 2007

The Boss Of It All (Direktøren for det hele)

The Boss Of It All (Direktøren for det hele) (Director: Lars von Trier, Denmark, 2006): After a string of ser­ious and polit­ical films, Danish bad boy Lars von Trier has dir­ected what he describes as a “harm­less” comedy. Ravn, the owner of an IT firm, is inter­ested in selling his com­pany to an Icelandic busi­nessman (a clever cameo by Icelandic dir­ector Fridrik Thor Fridriksson), but for the past ten years has pre­tended that the actual owner (“the boss of it all”) lives in America. It’s a ruse that has allowed him to blame all the hard decisions on the absent owner and take all the credit for any suc­cesses him­self. But now he needs to pro­duce this phantom in order to sign the deal, so he hires Kristoffer, an out-of-work actor whose self-importance is com­ic­ally out­sized com­pared to his talent. The hijinks begin when the company’s employees catch a glimpse of the man they’ve been waiting ten years to meet.

At first, it’s easy to snow the employees with busi­ness dou­blespeak, but soon he finds out that Ravn has been sending emails to them over the years posing as “the boss of it all” and he’s neg­lected to tell Kristoffer who’s been told which lie. Within a few days, he’s been seduced by one employee, punched by another, and engaged to a third. As the scheme spirals out of both men’s con­trol, the Icelanders return to seal the deal.

At this point, Kristoffer dis­covers that Ravn’s plan is to sell the com­pany, lay off all the employees, and profit from intel­lec­tual prop­erty that is not his to sell. Kristoffer’s ini­tial solu­tion threatens a form of infinite regress, with him blaming an absent “boss of the boss of it all.” Fortunately, he changes tac­tics, but just as we think he is going to show some moral courage, his actor’s ego over­whelms him.

The film plays a bit like a Shakespearean comedy, in that dir­ector von Trier inserts him­self into the film as nar­rator at sev­eral points, explaining what is coming up or what has just happened. And as a script, it’s clever and fre­quently hil­arious. The actors are also well-chosen, with the two leads espe­cially well-cast. The problem for me is that as a film, it isn’t visu­ally inter­esting. At this point, I need to insert some­thing about Automavision™, “a prin­ciple for shooting film (and recording the sound) developed with the inten­tion of lim­iting human influ­ence by inviting chance in from the cold and thus giving the work an ‘idea­less’ sur­face free of the force of habit and aes­thetics.” What this means is that after the cine­ma­to­grapher chooses a camera pos­i­tion and aper­ture, a com­puter algorithm off­sets it so that each shot achieves a kind of ran­dom­ness. In prac­tice, it was slightly dis­tracting, and cer­tainly didn’t add any­thing to a visu­ally unin­spired film.

There are a lot of jokes made in the film at the expense of the “artistic” theatre actor, but in this case, The Boss Of It All might just be more at home on an actual stage.

UPDATE: The film opens in Toronto on July 13.

Official site for the film

7/10(7/10)

{ Comments on this entry are closed }