SummaryLars von Trier has a bizarre way of showing his regard for mentor Jørgen Leth whose 1967 short film The Perfect Human, he claims to have seen 20 times. Von Trier challenges Leth to remake the film following an increasingly difficult set of obstructions.
Directed By:Jørgen Leth, Lars von Trier
Written By:Sophie Destin, Asger Leth, Jørgen Leth, Lars von Trier
The Five Obstructions
Metascore
Generally Favorable
79
User score
Generally Favorable
7.3
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Metascore
Generally Favorable
91% Positive
20 Reviews
20 Reviews
9% Mixed
2 Reviews
2 Reviews
0% Negative
0 Reviews
0 Reviews
100
A complete original. This ingenious, almost indescribable film won't remind you of anything else because there's nothing else like it.
89
Riveting, and frankly it's great fun to see Leth best the smirky von Trier five times running.
83
It's a treat to be diverted by a film that actually has a brain.
80
Watching The Five Obstructions is at once like witnessing two chess masters playing dominoes and like spying on a series of therapy sessions. Mr. von Trier clearly sees himself as a maniacal psychoanalyst.
75
It all feels like a performance for the camera: von Trier as madman producer taunting the elder filmmaker.
70
An unclassifiable film-school exercise--one part documentary, one part psychodrama, and one part mock manifesto--The Five Obstructions mainly serves to illuminate the game-like nature of Lars von Trier's aesthetic project.
50
In short, it's amusing only if you agree not to think very much about it.
User score
Generally Favorable
79% Positive
11 Ratings
11 Ratings
14% Mixed
2 Ratings
2 Ratings
7% Negative
1 Rating
1 Rating
Apr 30, 2023
7
The Five Obstructions is an impressive artistic exploration between mentor and pupil.
A play between the two that opens a huge door into how Von Trier worked and why he has received so much criticism for it. Even though the film is 20 years old, I had never seen it and I think it's the greatest display of his insecurities and it's impressive to see how he allowed them to be exposed. A film for a very limited audience but rewarding all the same.
Aug 30, 2024
6
Modern art house director Lars von Trier spends a few months torturing his idol, the experimental documentarian Jørgen Leth, in a variety of cruel and unusual ways. As the taskmaster of a twisted private game, von Trier compels Leth to painstakingly recreate his surrealist 1967 short, The Perfect Human, on five different occasions with a gauntlet of handicaps and restrictions. One shoot might require that he employ no more than twelve frames between cuts the next might insist he travel across the globe, and Leth is happily game for it all. Ultimately, the goal is to strip the film down to the core and unravel its mysteries - many of which were seemingly lost to the director himself - and it does successfully dip a few toes into those waters. But as Leth gets more footage under his belt, the obstructions become more passive, quizzical and vague. By the time we arrive at the delivery of his final film, the light, enjoyable concept has become too heady and analytical for its own good, and neither man smiles with the kind of vigor they showed at the outset.
Production Company:
- Almaz Film Productions S.A.
- Panic Productions
- Wajnbrosse Productions
- Zentropa Real ApS
Release Date:May 26, 2004
Duration:1 h 30 m
Tagline:Acclaimed director Lars Von Trier challenges his creative mentor to a diabolical game: Deconstruct cinema, reinvent cinema. Push the limits through torturous obstructions.
Awards
Motovun Film Festival
• 1 Win & 1 Nomination
Cinema Eye Honors Awards, US
• 1 Win & 1 Nomination
CPH:DOX
• 1 Nomination




























