Kirsten Dunst's prize part in 'Melancholia'

By Steven ReaThe Philadelphia Inquirer

TORONTO -- Kirsten Dunst has a confession to make. When Lars Von Trier contacted her -- first by email, then by Skype -- about a part in his new film, "Melancholia," she said yes, immediately.

"But it was funny," Dunst recalls, "because when Lars offered me the movie, I wasn't completely sure which character he wanted me to play. There are two girls. And I was like, 'I'd love to do it! I'd love to do it!'

"And I remember getting off the phone and thinking which one? Who am I? Justine or Claire?"

Von Trier, it turns out, had Dunst in mind for Justine -- a bride who shows up late for her own wedding reception, and who wanders through the swank and cavernous halls of her family's mansion -- a castle, really -- in a state of benumbed calm. (Charlotte Gainsbourg, star of Von Trier's jolting "Antichrist," is the other sister, Claire.)

Von Trier, the controversial Danish director who got booted out of the Cannes Film Festival in May for his awkward news-conference ramblings about Jews and Nazis, pitched "Melancholia" as "a beautiful movie about the end of the world."

And, indeed, as various family and friends gather for the ceremony, a new planet appears in the sky -- looming closer and closer to Earth.

But the film, too, is this big, romantic visual symphony, a sweeping, widescreen meditation on depression. Dunst's Justine is deep in her own dark world.

"Someone said to me that Justine is really like Lux grown

up," says Dunst, referring to the shellshocked teen she played in Sofia Coppola's 1999 debut, "The Virgin Suicides." "Justine is like a continuation -- she's what happened to Lux."

"Melancholia," which also stars John Hurt, Charlotte Rampling, Alexander Skarsgard and Kiefer Sutherland, won Dunst the best actress prize at Cannes Film Festival. It's an astounding performance -- Dunst is living this woman whole.

Von Trier, in an interview on the "Melancholia" website, says, "I think she's one! hell of an actress. She is much more nuanced than I thought, and she has the advantage of having had a depression of her own."

Dunst checked herself into a Utah treatment center in 2008. The actress, who doesn't like to talk about her "process," does acknowledge that one of the reasons she wanted to do "Melancholia" is that "you could really put your own inner life into this film."

Gainsbourg took home the best actress honors at Cannes two years ago for her work in "Antichrist." This time, again with Von Trier as director, it was Dunst's turn.

"Winning at Cannes meant so much to me," Dunst said while camped out at another film festival, Toronto's, for "Melancholia's" gala screening. "It's such a prestigious award. I would always look to see who won at Cannes, and would always think I have to watch that movie. I've held it in such high regard, and to be a part of that history, with all the other women who have won."


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