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In Cannes 2011, Lars von Trier compared "a little" to Hitler at a press conference – and was declared persona non grata by the festival's management. This year, he returned to La Croisette with "The House Jack Built" – once again divided. His latest book, which begins regularly on November 30 in Austria, describes the career of a serial killer embodied by 80-year-old Matt Dillon, who looks back on his "work" from beyond – and in conversation with a critical character of Vergil. trying to explain. No thug, who thinks of Trier himself: many parallels are envisioned for the career of scandalous filmmaker. The main character's remarks oscillate between self pity and megalomania, the film itself between excuses and renewed provocation, horror, tragedy and deep black comedy. After the premiere of "The House Jack built", "Die Presse" met a very fragile Trier.
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("Die Presse", print edition, 28.11.2018)
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