Eagerly anticipating this week ... (15-24)

Eagerly anticipating this week ... (15-24)
John Crowley's We Live in Time (2024)

2/05/2014

Black Swan (2010) or, Manic Dance



2 Film Excess nominations:

Best Lead Actress: Natalie Portman (lost to Jennifer Connelly for Virginia/What's Wrong with Virginia)
Best Costumes: Amy Westcott (lost to Pat Field for Sex and the City 2)  

+ Best Dance Movie of the Year

Natalie Portman freakishly made up as Darren Aronofsky's Black Swan

Nina is a ballerina in the New York Ballet, where Tchaikovsky's Swan Lake is the coming production, and she gets elected to play the swan queen. But the demanding duality of the part, the director's advances, the competition, a traumatized ex-star and her own and her mother's insatiable ambitions make everything fall apart for the young woman.



Natalie Portman (Léon (1994)) gives the performance of the year in a film so laden with pain that it literally hurts to watch it.
The ending of the utterly fantastic Black Swan is emotionally overpowering, but, comparing the film e.g. to its great American director Darren Aronofsky's earlier works such as Pi (1998) and his ultimate masterpiece Requiem for a Dream (2000), (not to mention The Wrestler (2008)) Black Swan's falls a little short. It nearly becomes a special effects-fueled horror movie, and for my taste, Aronofsky could have saved himself a swan effect or two for a bit more chilling realism towards the end. Bear in mind, though, that this is a minor impediment for the toweringly strong ballet psycho-thriller that Black Swan is.
For it is a wildly intense experience, beautiful and disturbing, and also a treat for classical lovers of Tchaikovsky's marvelous ballet. It was 5 times Oscar-nominated, and deservedly won Portman her only Oscar so far for her uncompromising performance in the lead.
We are at the moment fearfully awaiting Aronofsky's next film, the Biblical epic Noah (2014) with Russell Crowe. Its trailer is online for the curious.

Related posts:

2010 in films and TV-series - according to Film Excess [UPDATED III]
2010 in films and TV-series - according to Film Excess [UPDATED II]
2010 in films and TV-series - according to Film Excess [UPDATED I]
2010 in films and TV-series - according to Film Excess


Click to enlarge this other delicious, uncanny poster of Natalie Portman breaking like porcelain

Watch the goose-bumps-inducing trailer for the movie here

Budget: 13 mil. $
Box office: 329.3 mil. $
= Unbelievably successful

What do you think of Black Swan?
Other ballet or classical music films that are equally incredible?

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Eagerly anticipating this week ... (14-24)

Eagerly anticipating this week ... (14-24)
Ali Abassi's The Apprentice (2024)