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Ballerina (2008)
Tomatometer
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Reviews Counted:25
Fresh:20
Rotten:5
Average Rating:6.5/10
Consensus: A straightforward documentary about five Russian ballerinas, Bertrand Normand's Ballerina is enlivened by a fairy-tale sensibility.
Rated: Not Rated
Genre: Education/General Interest
Theatrical Release:Jan 16, 2009 Limited
Synopsis:
In the grand tradition of the Ballet Russes comes Bertrand Normand's portrait of five Russian ballerinas from the
Mariinski Theatre, formerly known as the Kirov. Behind any great ballerina lies...
In the grand tradition of the Ballet Russes comes Bertrand Normand's portrait of five Russian ballerinas from the
Mariinski Theatre, formerly known as the Kirov. Behind any great ballerina lies the discipline and rigour that
comes from decades of training and practice; and Russia's pre-eminent dancers -- superstars such as Nijinsky,
Baryshnikov and Pavlova -- established the reputation of Russian dancers as the best in the world. The dancers
profiled in Ballerina are uniquely individual -- tough, insightful and exceptionally talented; onstage they reveal
no hint of the sweat, pain and hard work of the rehearsal studio. From Swan Lake to Romeo and Juliet, from the
backstage studio to performing on stages around the world, Ballerina captures the sublime beauty of ballet, in all
its resplendent glory.
The classic ballerina exercises an art that is becoming rare, a profession as demanding that it is not well
known. She fascinates because her fate seems so fragile. But there is a country where she still shines as
resplendently as ever, Russia. Land of absolutes, the cult of beauty, wideness and nostalgia, also the land
of a forgotten femininity: Russia is the land of the ballerina par excellence.
Director Bertrand Normand, director and lover of ballet, has for a long while been impressed by the
singularity the Russian Ballerinas. He went to St Petersburg looking for what makes these dancers unique.
Through his personal research, he has found a new vision of classical ballet, its world and the power it
exercises on the audience.
Ballerinais about going through the curtain which separates the audience from the artist on stage.
Norman’s quest has taken him to the Mariinski Theatre, formerly called Kirov. This theatre has seen
centuries of the world’s finest choreographers and interpreters. There Norman meets Alina, Ulyana,
Evgenia, Svetlana and Diana, who are the principal personalities of the film. Women with very different
characters, young dancers beginning their careers or world famous stars, they illustrate together the steps
and fundamental issues of a ballerina’s life. Norman followed and filmed them over a period of months,
onstage, during rehearsals and at home. He found for each one of them a challenge for the future.
Whether it is the beginner leaving school to begin a new career, the injured star who must make her come
back , the rising star leaving her theatre to blossom somewhere else, they embody the many different
aspects of the Ballerina.
The story of a ballerina is the story of a permanent metamorphosis. Whether it is at different moments of
her career or at different moments of the day, from the young girl suffering at rehearsals or the one who
shines with grace on stage, or the one who goes back to a common social life, the ballerina changes
constantly and her beauty appears in this transformation.
Though the art of ballet is to appear graceful and light, this is the product of exhausting and painful work
for the dancers. Watching these artists, ballet becomes more than mere aesthetics, it convey to the
audience deep emotions. The artist can transcend the repertoire to create something new, never seen
before. That’s what happens when stars like Diana Vishneva, Svetlana Zakharova, and maybe even more
Ulyana Lopatkina, are dancing.
But it is while filming young dancers like Alina Somova ou Evgenia Obraztsova evolving and growing
that the director can show the viewer the mystery of the metamorphosis that characterizes the life and art
of the “ballerina”. --© First Run Features
Starring: Ulyana Lopatkina, Elena Obraztsova, Alina Somova, Diana Vishneva
Starring: Ulyana Lopatkina, Elena Obraztsova, Alina Somova, Diana Vishneva, Svetlana Zakharova
Director: Bertrand Normand
Director: Bertrand Normand
Screenwriter: Bertrand Normand
Studio: First Run Features
Reviews for Ballerina
Ballerina is most memorable, not surprisingly, in capturing these women on the move, whether dancing in full costume on the Mariinsky stage or practicing endlessly in the theater's rehearsal rooms.
Ballerina has the feel of a propaganda puff piece put out by the Russian tourist board.
Mildly compelling and somewhat fascinating, but often tedious, incomplete and lacking enough insight about what it's truly like to be a ballerina.
A close-up but still, one senses, heavily idealized documentary portrait.
While the mysterious air of the ballerina is preserved, a chance to reveal the real people behind the iconic, ethereal image is squandered.
... in its simplistic, by-the-book delivery, Ballerina does give an inkling of the blood and sweat hidden underneath the ethereal beauty of classical dance.
A refreshing and illuminating portrait of five new stars in Russian ballet.
As dazzling as they can be in performance, the ballerinas are even more breathtaking when a camera catches them alone in the shadows, dancing only for themselves.
This rare, behind-the-scenes dance film, which is more a profile of dancers than of the dance, shows that Russia and its famed Kirow are still the world's core of ballet.
The movie is an admirable look into the venerable St. Petersburg company and how dancers thrive or just survive in the physically challenging world of dance.
Not as perceptive as Etoiles or as ... entertaining as Ballets Russes, [but] still a glimpse into a priviledged, ruthlessly demanding world few outsiders ever get to see.
Skillfully written and entertaining documentary that is also a clever investigation into the professional lives of the world's best dancers, the ballerinas of Russia's Kirov Ballet.
Dance aficionados will be sent over the moon by this compelling documentary from director Bertrand Norman, chronicling what it takes to be a prima ballerina in the Mariinski Theatre.
Watching these women perform is a striking lesson in ballet's rigorous aesthetic alchemy -- and the extreme, exquisite individualism that prevails.
Such a brief glimpse into these women's lives and art whets the appetite for more; alas, Ballerina ends far too quickly, leaving only their willowy shadows behind.
| Tomatometer Percentage | Movie | Date |
|---|---|---|
| | Film Ist: A Girl & A Gun | 12/2 |
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| 67% 67% | Everybody's Fine | 12/4 |
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| | Armored | 12/4 |
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