Dogme 25 – Vow of Chastity (2025)

(dogma25.dk)

40 points | by internet_points 5 hours ago ago

45 comments

  • mr_mitm 3 hours ago

    Interesting that they only have one rule in common with the predecessor: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dogme_95

  • jedimastert 2 hours ago

    I feel like people are reading this as "this is how the under signers think all movies should be made, and we are judging movies not made this way as a moral failing", when I think a better reading would be "as directors/film makers/story tellers, this is how we think we can maximize our own creativity and joy when we make movies".

  • jedimastert an hour ago

    So this is my art degree coming out, but I feel like invoking the name of Dogma 95 and the "vow of chastity" without what appears to be any of the original people involved or blessing feels a little lame, especially when the actual rules are pretty different from the original. At least, I don't see any indication of like a real personal connection to the original.

    I feel like they probably should have come up with a different name and just noted the connection in the manifesto

  • RobotToaster 2 hours ago

    I wonder if they would accept a CGI movie entirely set within a computer, nothing in the rules seem to prohibit it :).

  • Hnrobert42 3 hours ago

    What is happening? What is the difference between Dogma and Dogme? What is this site about?

  • hau 3 hours ago

    >The film must be shot where the narrative takes place.

    This one really stands out by exculding whole genres and not really adding anything interesting to work around.

    • irdc 3 hours ago

      Which genres would that be?

      One could also argue that certain genres simply won't ever work as an arthouse movie.

      • RobotToaster 2 hours ago

        > Which genres would that be?

        Space opera, high fantasy and bangsian fantasy are three that come to mind.

        • irdc 2 hours ago

          I could see bangsian fantasy work if the afterlife were to be located on earth (which opens up some narrative possibilities, though they're a bit unoriginal). The other two are predicated upon portraying their locations inauthentically, which conflicts with the rules Dogme 25 strives to follow.

        • coldtea 2 hours ago

          Exluding them is for the better... we got more than enough

    • brazzy 3 hours ago

      I don't think it's meant as a constraint to be worked around, but as a guardrail against being inauthentic.

      And it excludes a lot less than its inspiration Dogme 95, which has as one rule "Genre movies are not acceptable."

      • pjc50 2 hours ago

        > "Genre movies are not acceptable."

        I find that hilarious, like proclaiming that only other people have an ethnicity or an accent. Because of course Dogme is a genre of its own.

        • wl 2 hours ago

          Perhaps Dogme 95/Dogma 25 films are in a genre of their own, but they're not "genre movies." People make the same argument with "literary fiction"/"non-genre fiction" vs "genre fiction." The terms have meaning whether or not you want to acknowledge it.

        • brookst 2 hours ago

          Dogme is more of a methodology than genre. Genre usually means settings and tropes, like scifi or horror or superhero.

          Though I’d argue that rom-com, period pieces, and biopics also are “genre”, at least to the extent a particular movie just paints by numbers within those styles.

    • aetherspawn 3 hours ago

      It kind of protects against low budget sci-fi I guess, which could be a net good thing.

      Under the rules you could attempt to shoot Resident Alien, but not Star Trek.

      • irdc 3 hours ago

        I'm thinking you could shoot an awesome sci-fi thriller under these rules. Even one that includes space travel. Just don't have any of the narrative take place in space: have only one character off-planet and have them communicate via radio.

      • jmusall 2 hours ago

        I've seen good, low-budget indie sci-fi short films that would presumably meet all of the Dogma 25 rules. So I think it doesn't protect against this category of films and neither would that be a good thing anyways. It just requires creative solutions if you want to e.g. portrait space travel.

    • dfxm12 2 hours ago

      That's ok. The goal is not for every film to fit into this criteria.

    • viccis 2 hours ago

      Makes sense because it's similar to one of the ones from Dogme95 which explicitly excluded genre files.

  • maelito 3 hours ago

    My eyes are bleeding reading this CSS

    • bdcravens 2 hours ago

      The same way that HN puts tags like [video] or [pdf] in titles, they should have something like [eyestab] for a site like that. I was so not ready for that visual assault.

    • leshenka 2 hours ago

      I believe red and black theme is an artistic choice. Sadly, readability suffers from this choice. Just making the text bold makes it a lot better while preserving its spirit.

    • orangebread 2 hours ago

      My brain is bleeding after reading this strange ass manifesto.

  • rs_rs_rs_rs_rs 2 hours ago

    Pretentious, pompous trash.

  • artyom 3 hours ago

    Can we have just good cinema back?

    Not the cookie-cutter safe productions of today, which are essentially 2 hours long advertisements for popcorn and toys.

    Not this snob "here's us certifying ourselves about being pure" bullshit.

    Just good cinema. You know what I'm talking about.

    • ramon156 3 hours ago

      There is a lot of good cinema out there, it's just not at your fingertips. I too have become too lazy to look further than my nose's length.

      • AlecSchueler 3 hours ago

        There's even some good stuff in the big cinemas. Barbie was excellent for example.

    • mnewme 3 hours ago

      There is great cinema today, sadly a lot of great movies lack proper distribution. Go to film festivals, the quality of movies is only increasing

    • jamal-kumar 3 hours ago

      Lars Von Trier is objectively good cinema

      • falcor84 2 hours ago

        I suppose that's not what you meant, but I love the idea of "Lars Von Trier" as a persona being good cinema.

        At the very least, it made me understand that I need him to appear as himself in the next Death Stranding game.

      • detritus 3 hours ago

        egh, as much as I enjoyed his Dogme 95 fayre when I was young and far more self-important, I find his later 'big cinema' output turgid twaddle.

        Melancholia was just about bareable but from Mandalay onwards I could barely struggle through to the end of his flicks.

        Nymphomaniac made me almost literally angry at its denouement. Just.. shit.

      • 0gs 3 hours ago

        i guess. he's also a misogynistic piece of shit

        • whywhywhywhy 3 hours ago

          Who would have thought an auteur would be a fully formed and flawed person where flaws may be as extreme as their talent.

          It’s almost as if creativity is connected to emotions, ideology and experience or something.

          • 0gs 2 hours ago

            everyone, i think. doesn't mean auteurs have to make movies glorifying their flaws without a trace of introspection for 20+ years.

    • leopld 2 hours ago

      Name a movie that’s your reference of good cinema

  • mayukh 3 hours ago

    Nothing like rules for spurring creativity. Waiting for the manual next.

    • jedimastert 2 hours ago

      > Nothing like rules for spurring creativity.

      I feel like it's pretty well known in creative spaces that constraints breed creativity.

    • coldtea 2 hours ago

      Creative after creative and artist after artist has said pretty much that constraints and limitations indeed spur creatitivy...

    • smcl 2 hours ago

      Deliberately imposing constraints on yourself is actually a very well-established way to spur creativity and innovation. For example this movement was inspired by something similar from back in the 1990s: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dogme_95