Return to Lars Von Trier’s Purgatory of Pain

After 25 years the doors have opened again. The first name in Danish filmmaking and the bad boy of avant-garde arthouse cinema returns to the television series he originally concluded in 1997, now with a final third season. Lars von Trier, who pioneered the art movement Dogme 95 — a strict, stripped-back style that “returned power to the director” — and shocked the Cannes Film Festival with explosive, divisive entries like “Antichrist,” “Dogville” and “Nymphomaniac,” took an unexpected, brief path into television in the 1990s. Inspired by what was happening overseas as David Lynch’s experimental tonal shifts on ABC’s “Twin Peaks” — surreal, foreboding, a soap opera spliced with Dadaism — changed the landscape of the medium, von Trier hoped to do the same for Danish broadcast television. Shot in eerie orange sepia on a wild handheld camera and a budget of perhaps kr35.00, von Trier’s supernatural hospital show “The Kingdom” is darkly absurd, a claustrophobic dreamscape where exorcisms, severed heads, bureaucracy and dry, situational humor collide. Called “Riget” in the Danish broadcast, a nickname for Rigshospitalet, the largest public teaching hospital in Copenhagen, the series attracted vocal fans, including American master of horror, Stephen King. The long awaited third season, “The Kingdom: Exodus” brings the full episode count up to 13, but five hours is really more than enough time for von Trier’s dark humored nihilism to alter your brain.

MUBI presents the digital restored three seasons of “The Kingdom” at Film at Lincoln Center in New York, N.Y., starting Dec. 16.

Production photo by Henrik Ohsten

Production photo by Henrik Ohsten

Production photo by Henrik Ohsten

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