Skip to main content
Breaking the Waves film image; woman looking up

Breaking the Waves

Book Now Book Now

In a strict Calvinist community on the Isle of Skye in the 1970s, Bess (Emily Watson) is an innocent young woman who comprehends the world differently from most. She marries a Danish oil-rig worker, Jan (Stellan Skarsgaard) but struggles with his long absences. She prays for his return, but God’s answer is cruel and perverse….

Melding naturalism, melodrama and romanticism, this was the first of Lars von Trier’s controversial but highly successful Golden Heart Trilogy, in which a purely good heroine is put through an emotional wringer (the others are The Idiots and Dancer in the Dark). This was also the first film von Trier made after co-founding the Dogme 95 group with Thomas Vinterberg. Breaking the Waves is not a Dogme production, but it shares many of the impulses of the Dogme films in its impatience with the discreet niceties of orthodox film storytelling. This is a movie that wants to shake us up and change our patterns. Driven by Robby Muller’s dizzying camerawork and a truly extraordinary performance from Emily Watson in her first screen role, it does just that.

Sunday’s Pantheon screening will feature a 15-minute introduction by a local film scholar and be followed by an audience talkback.

This epic melodrama about love, faith, suffering and redemption is emotionally overwhelming. Its raw power is assured not only by the forthright performances and the increasingly cruel, violent events of the last hour, but by Robby Müller’s edgily realist ’Scope camerawork.

Geoff Andrew, Time Out

Riskey does not begin to describe Breaking the Waves, [a] raw, crazy tour de force. Courting and sometimes winning ridicule, daring to fuse true love with lurid exploitation and pure religious faith, the Danish director Lars von Trier has created a fierce, wrenchingly passionate film about the struggles of a shy young woman who is goodness personified. The film’s final impact is stunning.

Janet Maslin, New York Times

Not many movies like this get made, because not many filmmakers are so bold, angry and defiant.

Roger Ebert

Director

Lars von Trier

Cast

Emily Watson, Stellan Skarsgaard, Katrin Cartlidge, Jean Marc Barr, Udo Kier

Credits
Country of Origin

Denmark

Year

1996

Language

English

Awards

Grand Prix, Cannes Film Festival; Best Film, European Film Awards

19+
158 min

Book Tickets

Sunday January 18

11:00 am
Guests/Q&As Hearing Assistance
VIFF Centre - VIFF Cinema
Book Now

Tuesday January 20

8:00 pm
Hearing Assistance
VIFF Centre - VIFF Cinema
Book Now

Credits

Screenwriter

Lars von Trier, Peter Asmussen

Cinematography

Robby Müller

Editor

Anders Refn

Production Design

Karl Júlíusson

Also in This Series

The greatest films of all time.

Fantasia

126 min

Walt Disney pushed the boundaries of animation and sound recording when he put together a movie concert: eight classical pieces by Bach, Beethoven, Stravinski et al, each animated in a different style. It's playful, sometimes cute, other times inspired.

Image: © Disney, 1940

VIFF Centre - VIFF Cinema

Breaking the Waves

Dir. Lars von Trier
158 min

Kicking off our 2026 Pantheon series of the greatest films ever made, Lars von Trier's 1996 masterpiece is a devastating melodrama featuring an indelible performance from Emily Watson as the woman whose love for her husband knows no bounds.

VIFF Centre - VIFF Cinema

L'Atalante

Dir. Jean Vigo
89 min

Jean Vigo died from TB in 1934 at the age of 29. Yet he is revered as one of the great innovators of the medium, and his only feature, L'Atalante, is a seminal film, a tender, lyrical love story set on a barge on the Seine.

VIFF Centre - VIFF Cinema

Antonia's Line

Dir. Marleen Gorris
102 min

This month's Pantheon selection spotlights the first woman to win the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film, the Dutch feminist filmmaker Marleen Gorris, and her charming, vibrant tale of an emancipated farmer who refuses to conform.

VIFF Centre - VIFF Cinema

Sansho the Bailiff

Dir. Kenji Mizoguchi
124 min

The third of the great Japanese masters (with Ozu and Kurosawa), Mizoguchi is a poet of suffering. There's plenty of that here in his exquisite telling of an ancient folktale about the enslavement of a woman and her two children.

VIFF Centre - VIFF Cinema

M

Dir. Fritz Lang
110 min

A sophisticated and gripping suspense drama about the hunt for a child murderer, played with disturbing compassion by the great Peter Lorre. M was Fritz Lang's first sound film, and you can sense his excitement at the possibilities.

VIFF Centre - VIFF Cinema

The Leopard

Dir. Luchino Visconti
185 min

Lampedusa's elegiac account of a 19th century Sicilian aristocrat, Prince Salina, fading into history is one of the pinnacles of Italian cinema, an epic which influenced the tempo and gravitas of The Godfather, Age of Innocence and The Deer Hunter.

VIFF Centre - VIFF Cinema

Rear Window

Dir. Alfred Hitchcock
110 min

James Stewart is the man who sees too much. "Jeff" Jeffries is a sports photographer waylaid by a broken leg, doomed to spend the summer in a wheelchair in his New York apartment. That's how he comes to witness a murder in the dead of night (or does he?).

VIFF Centre - VIFF Cinema

Xala

Dir. Ousmane Sembène
123 min

Ousmane Sembène is known as the "father of African cinema". An adaptation of his own 1973 novel, Xala is a hilarious, caustic satire of political corruption under an inept post-colonial patriarchy.

VIFF Centre - VIFF Cinema

Andrei Rublev

Dir. Andrei Tarkovsky
183 min

Andrei Tarkovsky's vast and vivid episodic epic tells the story of a Russian monk and painter of religious icons 1400-1428, during the time of the Tartar invasions.

VIFF Centre - VIFF Cinema

Day of Wrath

Dir. Carl Theodor Dreyer
97 min

Anna, the young second wife of a well-respected but much older pastor, falls in love with her stepson when he returns to their small seventeenth-century village. Stepping outside the bounds of the village's harsh moral code has disastrous results.

VIFF Centre - VIFF Cinema

Sunless

Dir. Chris Marker
103 min

Chris Marker's dazzling and discursive essay film ranges across Japan, Africa, San Francisco, Iceland, politics, philosophy, ritual, movies and memory. It's a film for the permanently curious.

VIFF Centre - VIFF Cinema