Following up his Best Actor win for The Theory of Everything, Eddie Redmayne got straight to work on his next project, reteaming with his Les Misérables director Tom Hooper. Set to premiere at Venice and screen at TIFF ahead of a November release, The Danish Girl follows the true love story of Danish artist Einar Wegener and his wife Gerda as he makes the pioneering journey to becoming a woman, Lili Elbe, in the 1920s.
“I found it profoundly moving,” Redmayne told Out recalling when he was wrapping his last film with Hooper. “I knew nothing about it, going in. It felt like it was a piece about authenticity and love and the courage it takes to be yourself.” The first trailer has now arrived for the film starring Alicia Vikander, Ben Whishaw, Sebastian Koch, Amber Heard, and Matthias Schoenaerts. Check it out below and return for our review shortly.
TIFF’s official description:
Tom Hooper’s gorgeous new feature continues his march through some of the fascinating byways of history. The Danish Girl, drawn from the fact-based novel by David Ebershoff and similar in spirit to Hooper’s magnificent The King’s Speech, focuses on a character struggling with internal demons that threaten his equilibrium. In the director’s Academy Award-winning 2010 film it was an unexpected, ill-prepared king with a speech impediment. Here it is a happily married and relatively successful young artist who gradually determines that he is truly a she, and sets out to release the secret person inside.
Sumptuously photographed, The Danish Girl is set in Copenhagen in the 1920s and focuses almost entirely on a free-spirited couple, both of them painters — he of delicate landscapes, she of portraits. Einar (Eddie Redmayne), has just had a successful gallery show, but Gerda (Alicia Vikander) struggles to gain attention for her work. One day, Gerda asks her husband to stand in for a female model so she can complete her latest painting. Einar is overwhelmed by the experience of putting on beautiful, feminine clothes, and soon it turns into a quiet obsession. As Einar gradually rediscovers himself, Gerda’s paintings of him as a woman begin to attract serious attention. Gerda balances Einar’s transformation with her new-found acclaim. Einar, meanwhile, finds it impossible to put the genie back in the bottle: She will become Lili, one of the first known recipients of gender reassignment surgery.
One of the extraordinary things about The Danish Girl is the manner in which Hooper treats the emotional volatility these characters cope with, both individually and together. Love and understanding are paramount to them, even as the emergence of Lili brings simultaneous loss and gain. Vikander is superb, and Redmayne’s performance in his transgendered role is as subtle and powerful as his work in last year’s The Theory of Everything.
The Danish Girl opens on November 27th.