With his dazzling first three features, Lars von Trier sought nothing less than to map the soul of Europe, its troubled past, anxious present, and uncertain future. Linked by a fascination with hypnotic states and the mesmeric possibilities of cinema, the films that make up the Europe Trilogy, The Element of Crime, Epidemic, and Europa, filter the continent's turbulent history, guilt, and traumas through the Danish provocateur's audacious deconstructions of genres including film noir, melodrama, horror, and science fiction. Above all, they are bravura showcases for von Trier's hallucinatory visuals, with each shot a tour de force of technical invention and dark imagination.
This resource is supported by the Institute of Museum and Library Services under the provisions of the Library Services and Technology Act as administered by State Library of Iowa.