Tuesday, October 26, 2010

Black Swan Movie Review

I was interested to read in a recent interview with director Darren Aronofsky that his latest film, the ballet thriller Black Swan, originated as a companion piece to his 2008 hit, The Wrestler. Indeed, the films parallel each other in their focus on the intense physical and psychological pressures that weigh on their protagonists - both professional athletes - and capture the beauty and tragedy of the sacrifices performers must make for the sake of their craft. But where The Wrestler successfully towed the line between saccharine sentimentality and pathos, Black Swan is a much darker, more disturbing work that recalls the obsession and paranoia at the heart of the director's first film, Pi.

Set within the highly competitive and secluded world of a New York City ballet company, Black Swan stars Natalie Portman as Nina, an emotionally fragile, perfectionist who still lives with her overprotective mother (Barbara Hershey) on Manhattan's Upper West Side. When the company's director, Thomas Leroy (Vincent Cassel), decides to "retire" the company's aging star (Winona Ryder) in order to find a new soloist for his upcoming production of Swan Lake, Nina seems a shoe-in for the part of the timid and virginal White Swan. But in order to become the soloist, Nina must also be able to play the dark, seductive Black Swan - a role that seems better suited to the company's newest member, the free-spirited Lily (Mila Kunis). Despite his misgivings, Leroy gives Nina the role, sensing within her an undercurrent of wildness carefully hidden beneath her cold timidity and technical skill; his sexual advances come, seemingly, as a matter of course.

As the night of the ballet's opening draws nearer, the pressures on Nina escalate. What begins as neuroses easily explained by a stressful job and a repressive mother soon blossoms into a much darker psychosis: she hallucinates seeing her face on other women, indulges bloody fantasies of self-mutilation, and grows increasingly paranoid that Lily, recently assigned as her understudy, is conspiring to take her part. Yet even as her fervent dreams begin to invade waking life, Nina is dancing the Black Swan better and better.

Truly, this is a director at the top of his craft: Aronofsky masterfully draws attention to the brute physicality of the ballet - straining limbs, skipped meals, torn ligaments and bloodied feet. The narrative is taut throughout, framed in stark blacks and whites, and propelled with a constant nervous energy by cinematographer Matthew Libatique's tight cinéma vérité follow shots. The sound editing is similarly claustrophobic, amplifying Nina's every rasping breath or compulsive scratch of skin. And Portman is already generating Oscar buzz for her performance: possibly the best of her career.

Aronofsky strives for philosophical complexity with Black Swan, a film that, at its heart, is about the sacrifices performers make to create great art - the dual processes of creation and destruction. Along the way, it becomes one of the more psychologically disturbing horror films of the year - and it is on this point that critics will be divided. Black Swan is truly an incredible achievement: a beautifully shot, highly entertaining mix of high and low art that is guaranteed to mesmerize audiences. But while many of the horror conventions that Aronofsky employs are good for a quick scare, they often feel cheap, and - for better or for worse - come at the expense of the film's otherwise highbrow sensibility. Still, by the time the film reaches its logical and tragic conclusion, the auteur’s stunning cinematic experience and Portman’s virtuosic performance will undoubtedly move audiences.

Thursday, August 26, 2010

Black Swan What's It About?

Black Swan is the newest movie coming out from Darren Aronofsky. The plot was a closely held secret, and there were a lot of rumors swirling around, especially about what form the relationship between Natalie Portman and Mila Kunis, the movies 2 big stars, would take. When the Black Swan movie trailer came out, instead of clearing up any mysteries, it just spawned more and whetted the appetite of the Internet viewers.

Since the Black Swan movie premiere at movie festivals takes place on September first at the Venice Film Festival, it was inevitable that a trailer would come out. This trailer is just a teaser, just enough that everyone sees a little bit and wants more. There is a clip that seems to answer whether or not Natalie Portman's character Nina and Mila Kunis's character Lily have a very personal relationship, but it is just a flash on the screen and only raises more questions.

The Black Swan plot centers around the ballet world. Natalie Portman's character is an experienced, technically brilliant ballerina who is practicing for her lead part in the ballet Swan Lake. Her mother, played by Barbara Hershey, pushes her towards success, and her dance master keeps telling her to put more feeling into her dancing. Mila Kunis's character Lily enters. Lily dances with all the passion and emotion that Nina is missing out on. The movie focuses Nina's fixation on Lily and on their relationship.

Regarded as one of the year's most mysterious films, the less that is said about Black Swan, the more tension and excitement mounts about the movie. Some movie trailers give you a good idea of what the movie is about and what to expect. You have a pretty good idea of what is happening in the movie from what you see in the trailer. The Black Swan movie trailer is not that kind of trailer. Instead, it just helped to draw a further veil of mystery over the movie, leaving everyone confused as to exactly what is going to happen in the movie. There are a lot of people who can't wait to see Black Swan and see if it lives up to the mystery. Watch your favorite movies here.