The film premiered at Le Studio Médicis in Paris on 18 December 1964. The cinema equipment failed several times during the screening, the subtitles were of low quality and the reels were shown in the wrong order, prompting extremely negative reactions from the audience. It was released in Denmark on 1 January 1965 through Film-Centralen-Palladium. It was later screened to a packed house at the
1965 Venice Film Festival, but more than half of the audience walked out during the film. Those who remained gave the film a standing ovation, causing Dreyer to become visibly moved.
Pathé-Contemporary Films released
Gertrud in the United States in 1966.
Critical response From the outset, the film divided both critics and audiences. Immediately following the Paris premiere at a Dreyer retrospective where it was booed, the film was frequently referred to as a "disaster" in the press; after the Danish premiere the reception became more nuanced but still divided, and the film caused a big debate in Danish media. In
Esquire Magazine,
Dwight Macdonald wrote that "
Gertrud is a further reach, beyond mannerism into cinematic poverty and straightforward tedium. He just sets up his camera and photographs people talking to each other." An article in
Cinéma65 wrote that "Dreyer has gone from serenity to senility...Not a film, but a two-hour study of sofas and pianos." In defense of
Gertrud, Dreyer stated that "What I seek in my films...is a penetration to my actors' profound thoughts by means of their most subtle expressions...This is what interests me above all, not the technique of cinema.
Gertrud is a film that I made with my heart."
Andrew Sarris rated it the second-best of 1966, only beaten by
Blowup.
Tom Milne called it "the kind of majestic, necromantic masterpiece that few artists achieve even once in a lifetime."
Penelope Houston called it "an enigmatically modern film with the deceptive air of a staidly old fashioned one... This is a kind of distillation, at once contemplative and compulsive." Jean Sémolué said that "Of all Dreyer's works, it is the most inward and thus the culmination, if not the crown, of his aesthetic." The film was voted at No. 54 on the list of "100 Greatest Films" by the prominent French magazine
Cahiers du cinéma in 2008. In the
2012 edition of
Sight & Sound's poll of film critics, conducted every ten years to gauge critical opinion about the greatest films of all-time,
Gertrud tied for 43rd place in critic's poll and 59th in director's poll.
Accolades The film won the
FIPRESCI prize at the
26th Venice International Film Festival and the Prix du comité directeur at the 7th Festival des Ciné-Rencontres in Prades. It received the 1965
Bodil Award for Best Danish Film. The film was selected as the Danish entry for the
Best Foreign Language Film at the
38th Academy Awards, but was not accepted as a nominee. == See also ==