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Director 'sorry' for film that Norway killer loved

Morrissey's not the only one attracting attention over the attacks in Norway. It seems Anders Behring Breivik, the Norwegian man who killed 77 people recently, listed Lars von Trier's "Dogville" as one of his favorite films. Morissey on why he compared massacre to McDonald'sDanish director von Trier recently called himself a Nazi and said that he sympathizes with Hitler. But it turns out that he's
/ Source: Hollywood Reporter

Morrissey's not the only one attracting attention over the attacks in Norway. It seems Anders Behring Breivik, the Norwegian man who killed 77 people recently, listed Lars von Trier's "Dogville" as one of his favorite films.

Morissey on why he compared massacre to McDonald's

Danish director von Trier recently called himself a Nazi and said that he sympathizes with Hitler. But it turns out that he's not in favor of slaughtering large numbers of people.

After finding out that Breivik listed "Dogville" as one of his favorite films, von Trier said: "I feel badly about thinking that 'Dogville,' which in my eyes is one of my most successful films, should have been a kind of script for him.” The statement was made in an interview with the Danish paper Politiken, according to New York Magazine.

Insanity ruling not likely in Norway

“It’s horrific. My intention with 'Dogville' was totally opposite. Namely, to ask whether we can accept a protagonist who takes revenge on the entire village. And here I take the absolute distance from revenge. It’s a way to nuance the protagonist and our feelings and perhaps even uncover it, so it just is not black and white.”

"The last scene of 'Dogville' bears painful similarities with Utoeya," the director added.

Utoeya is the island where Breivik opened fire on a summer camp, killing 69 people. And at the end of 'Dogville,' the inhabitants of the town are all gunned down.

"You're asking me if I'm sad for having made this film? Yes, if it has proved to have inspired him, I'm sorry for having made it," said von Trier, adding that the film's intention was to educate the public, not inspire violence.