The Five Obstructions

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The Five Obstructions
Directed by Lars Von Trier
Jørgen Leth
Produced by Peter Aalbæk
Vibeke Windeløv
Written by Lars Von Trier
Jørgen Leth
Starring Lars Von Trier
Jørgen Leth
Claus Nissen
Daniel H. Rodriguez
Patrick Bauchau
Distributed by Zentropa Real ApS and Koch-Lorber Films
Release date(s) Flag of Canada 11 September 2003 (premiere at TIFF)
Flag of the United Kingdom 7 November 2003
Flag of Denmark 21 November 2003
Flag of the United States 26 May 2004 (NYC only)
Running time 103 minutes
Language Danish, English, French, Spanish
Budget Unknown
IMDb profile

The Five Obstructions (Danish: De Fem benspænd) is a 2003 film by Lars Von Trier and Jørgen Leth. The film is a documentary, but incorporates lengthy sections of experimental films produced by the filmmakers. The premise is that Lars Von Trier has created a challenge for his friend and mentor, Jørgen Leth, another filmmaker. Von Trier's favourite film is Leth's The Perfect Human (1967). Von Trier gives Leth the task of remaking The Perfect Human five times, each time with a different 'obstruction' (or obstacle) given by Von Trier.

[edit] The obstructions

  1. Leth must remake the film in Cuba (but with no set) with no shot longer than 12 frames, and he must answer the questions posed in the original film; Leth successfully completes this task.
  2. Leth must remake the film in the worst place in the world but not show that place onscreen; additionally, Leth must play the role of "the man". The meal must be included but the woman is not to be included. Leth remakes the film in the red light district of Bombay, only partially hiding it behind a translucent screen.
  3. Because Leth failed to complete task 2 perfectly, Von Trier punishes him, telling him to either remake the film in any way he chooses, or redo obstruction 2 in Bombay again. Leth chooses the former option and remakes it in Brussels using split-screen effects.
  4. Leth must remake the film as an animation. He does so with the aid of Bob Sabiston, a specialist in rotoscoping, who creates animated versions of shots from the previous films.
  5. The fifth obstruction is that Von Trier has already made the fifth version, but it must be credited as Leth's, and Leth must read a voiceover narration ostensibly from his own perspective but in fact written by Von Trier.
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