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Ordet (1955, Denmark) (aka The Word)
In Carl Theodor Dreyer's beautifully-photographed,
pretentious, serious-minded, fantasy supernatural religious drama
(translated "The
Word") with much intellectual debate about faith, life, death,
and love - it mostly told of the clash within Christianity between
orthodox (or organized) religion and true or personal religious faith.
Its origins were from a 1925 play by prominent Danish
playwright and Lutheran minister Kaj Munk who was executed by the
Nazis during their occupation of Denmark.
- the film was set in August of 1925 in the rural
Danish farm countryside of Jutland; it followed the life of the
prosperous Borgen family led by its traditionalist, stern and
prominent patriarch - Morten Borgen who had three
Borgen sons (in descending order of age): Mikkel (with wife
Inger), Johannes, and young Anders
Morten Borgen (Henrik Malberg)
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Patriarch Morten Borgen (Henrik Malberg)
- the white-bearded, widowed, devout, joyless, Lutheran father
- a somber and curmudgeonly member of the religious establishment
who believed in a joyous and forgiving God, but also had said: "Miracles
don't happen any more"
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Mikkel Borgen (Emil Hass Christensen)
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Inger Borgen (Birgitte Federspiel)
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Mikkel Borgen (Emil Hass Christensen) - the eldest,
anti-religious, unbeliever-agnostic, was married to religious,
kind-hearted wife Inger Borgen (Birgitte Federspiel) for 8 years;
Inger was very pregnant with a third child; she shared religious
views with her father-in-law Morten, but not with her husband; Mikkel
and Inger had two young daughters, Maren (Ann Elisabeth Rud) and
Lilleinger (Susanne Rud)
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Johannes Borgen (Preben Lerdorff Rye) - an "incurably
mad" and demented 27 year-old theology student, and the black
sheep of the family who after intense study and the reading of Soren
Kierkegaard's writings, became crazy and began to believe that
he was the resurrected Jesus Christ of Nazareth - he lost touch
with reality
[Note: Kierkegaard's religious writings, most prominently his 1854-55 diatribe Attack
Upon Christendom, proclaimed the theme of the inadequacy of faith, especially
in Denmark's state-established Lutheran Church.]
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Son Anders Borgen (Cay Kristiansen)
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Anders Borgen (Cay Kristiansen) - the youngest son,
regarded as emotionally-weak, and disobedient because of his love
for Anne Petersen (Gerda Nielsen) - the silent and dutiful daughter
of pious shopkeeper-tailor Peter Petersen (Ejnar Federspiel) and
his wife Kirstin Petersen (Sylvia Eckhausen)
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- the Petersens were strict, religious
fundamentalists (a non-conformist, unconventional or exclusionary,
revivalist sectarian group known as Inner Mission) who rigorously
and dogmatically advocated extreme and personal religious conversion,
'fire and brimstone' sermons, and emotional prostration before
God
Peter Petersen (Ejnar Federspiel)
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Daughter Anne Petersen (Gerda Nielsen)
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- the romantic relationship that developed between
Anders and Anne had Romeo and Juliet consequences
that led to warring between the Petersen and Borgen families; their
two different views of faith violently clashed (the Borgens' traditional
Lutheranism vs. the Petersens' fundamentalism); Morten Borgen attempted
to persuade Peter Petersen to allow his daughter Anne to marry
Borgen's son Anders, but Peter refused on the grounds that Anders (and
his father) weren't Christians; he would allow the marriage if he could
convince Morten and Anders to join his sect; he even expressed hopes
that Inger would die to prove to Morten how stubborn and wrong he was
to not have faith in him and be converted
- Inger suddenly became very sick due to
her difficult pregnancy; she delivered a stillborn baby, but survived
the ordeal
- while attending to Inger as she recuperated, the Doctor
(Henry Skjær) visited with the new Pastor (Ove Rud) and Morten
about what had saved Inger - the power of prayer or science? - "Which
do you think helped most this evening? Your prayers or my treatment?" Morten
answered: "God's blessing, my dear doctor"; the Pastor added: "Naturally,
miracles are possible, since God is the creator of everything and
everything is therefore possible to Him"; but then he mentioned
how God often didn't perform miracles because "miracles would
break the laws of nature and naturally, God does not break His own
laws"; to the pastor, the miracle of Christ's resurrection was,
on the other hand, "under special circumstances"
- but then unfortunately, although Inger was recovering
nicely and it was expected that she would survive, she died due to
complications ("she drifted away in her sleep"); although all the
others were stunned (especially Mikkel), Johannes responded: "She
is not dead, she is sleeping"; when Johannes visited the deathbed,
he fainted, but then ran away into the moors and couldn't be located
- after learning the awful news, Peter told his wife
Kirstin (Sylvia Eckhausen) that he felt apologetic for earlier having
offended Morten and for not turning his other cheek
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The Open Coffin for Mikkel's Deceased Wife Inger
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- a religious funeral service was held in
her honor and the whole community came together at the Borgen farm;
just before the funeral ceremony, Peter reconciled with Morten at the side
of Inger's open coffin, and agreed to his daughter Anne's marriage
to Morten's son Anders: ("Now she belongs to you all...Be gentle with
her up here")
- Mikkel was very grieved when it was suggested by
Morten that the lid should be put on the coffin - because it was obvious
that Inger's soul was not there but was already with God: "No, you
must not take her. You must not separate us. Her body is here. I
loved her body also"
- when Johannes unexpectedly arrived at the funeral ceremony (and seemed to
have lost his delusions); he asked quizzically about why everyone's
faith hadn't been used to try to bring back Inger: "Not
one of you has had the idea of asking God to give Inger back to
you again?...All of you blaspheme God with your lukewarm faith.
(To Mikkel) If you had prayed to God, He'd have listened to your
prayers. (To all) ... why is there not one among these believers
who believe?"; Johannes' first inclination
was to let Inger remain dead: "Inger, you must rot, because
the times are rotten. Put the lid on"
- Inger's young daughter Maren tiptoed over to take
Johannes' hand, and urged him: "Hurry now, Uncle";
Johannes praised Maren's childlike faith and asked her if she believed
that he could miraculously restore Inger: "The
child - the greatest in the kingdom of heaven...Do you believe I
can do it?"; when she responded positively ("Yes, uncle") and prompted him
to ask God to bring her back from death, he decided to act - and perform
an amazing miracle due to her belief: ("Thy
faith is great, thy will shall be done. Look now at your mother.
When I say the name of Jesus, she will arise")
- Johannes
then offered a transcendent prayer: ("Hear me, thou who
art dead....Is it crazy to wish to rescue life? Trust in God. Jesus
Christ, if it is possible, then give her leave to come back to life,
give me the Word, the word that can make the dead come to life. Inger,
in the name of Jesus Christ, I bid thee, arise!")
- Johannes'
words miraculously resurrected Inger from the dead. As she came to
life in her open coffin, she unclasped her joined hands, slowly opened
her eyes, and kissed her husband Mikkel during an embrace; with tears
in her eyes, she asked:
"The child - is it alive?"; Mikkel answered: "Yes,
Inger. It lives at home with God"; she asked: "With God?" -
realizing that her agnostic husband was now proclaiming that he
had found faith! ("Yes, Inger, I have found your faith. Now
life begins for us");
she responded: "Life, yes, Life." ("Yes.") "Life" -
the film's last lines of dialogue
- in the conclusion, the miracle of resurrection
had brought a new understanding of God through Mikkel's conversion
to faith; this revelation also united, healed and reconciled
the patriarchs of the two families: Morten Borgen and Peter Petersen;
they now were in agreement with each other - Peter: "Morten,
it is the God of old, the God of Elijah, eternal and the same" -
Morten: "Yes, eternal and the same"
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The Two Staunch Patriarchs of Danish Familes - The Borgens
and the Petersens
Johannes with Inger's Young Daughter Maren (Ann Elisabeth
Rud)
Inger's Difficult Birth Delivery - Mikkel with Doctor
Inger Recovering
The Pastor and Doctor Speaking About the Power of Prayer vs. the Power
of Miracles
Morten, Mikkel, and Anders at Inger's Deathbed
Inger's Death Notice
Johannes Unexpectedly Arrived at the Funeral Ceremony
Johannes Borgen with Young Maren Borgen As She Professed
Faith That Her Mother Inger Could be Resurrected
Johannes' Miraculous Resurrection of Inger From Her
Coffin, Embracing Mikkel
Conclusion: United Families (the Borgens and Petersens):
"Yes, eternal and the same"
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