Saturday, March 5, 2011

Toni Bentley reviews Black Swan

Natalie Portman in “Black Swan.”

“The movie provides the most recent -- though most egregious -- example of the “ballerinas-are-victims” stance that certain good Samaritans love to embrace,” writes Toni Bentley,

Why I posted this review:
I admire Toni Bentley immensely for her knowledge of ballet and her ability to translate that knowledge into words on paper which make her books fascinating reading. So it is with sadness, but understanding, that I read her unfavorable review of the film Black Swan.

Dancers are very self-critical always seeing flaws in their own performances and trying to improve and that hyper-criticality will sometimes spill over to their non-dance lives. I have some dancer friends who are unable to relax and enjoy a dance performance from the audience. They are continually watching for missteps, errors of commission or omission by the performers, to the extent that they can’t enjoy the performance. I think for many dancers who didn’t like Black Swan, that is what has happened. In critiques you read: Portman isn’t a ballerina… No one who only trained for a year can adequately portray a body that has been trained for 15 years… There is not enough dance… Most dance scenes were shot from the waist up… Ballet isn’t all rabid ballet moms, bloody toes, eating disorders and predatory Artistic Directors. But no one denies that these things exist in ballet and many dancers and devoted ballet fans dislike having that pointed out in a popular film. And many hate the idea of using the duality of Odette / Odile in Swan Lake as the frame story on which to hang a dramatic psycho-thriller of a dancer going insane. Toni Bentley wanted an entirely different film and she didn’t get it. Even so, I think this review is worth reading. I am indebted to J for bringing this review to my attention.

THE DAILY BEAST

Butchery at the Ballet

by Toni Bentley
February 25, 2011 8:48pm

“Oscar and audiences may love Black Swan, but one former New York City Ballet dancer thinks it’s nothing more than “balletploitation.” Author Toni Bentley explains why Darren Aronofsky’s psychological thriller is insultingly off pointe.

I have tried to avoid writing about Darren Aronofsky’s pirouetting parody Black Swan, but, having been a professional ballet dancer for George Balanchine, I keep getting asked what I think of the movie. And now that it has garnered a huge audience, numerous passionate fans and five Oscar nominations, it is time to put on my toe shoes, wrap my ribbons, paint on my four-inch black eyebrows, lace-up my wet-tutu suit and take a grand jeté into Aronofsky’s swamp. I mean lake.

I first saw this film at a screening last November, before it opened to the public. I had high hopes: Aronofsky had done a great deal of homework on the “ballet world,” consulting with many dancers, myself included. Reading the script a year or so previously, I’d been baffled by its reductive simplicity. But, hey, I thought, what do I know about script writing—and Aronofsky and his people seemed like earnest folk.

The film opens with a gorgeous low-lit scene of a ballerina’s beautiful legs and feet ensconced in the shimmering satin sheaths that are the art’s greatest symbol, dancing to the great soaring strains of Tchaikovsky’s passionate score. Oh goody, I thought, I will be swept away by this: the magic, the music, the beauty, the lines, those hypnotizing arched feet that skim the stage on their toes like purring paws (the ballerina was, of course, not the film’s star, Natalie Portman, but her double, Sarah Lane, a real dancer from American Ballet Theatre.)

Unfortunately it proved a terrible tease—the only lyrical moment in a film ostensibly about a lyrical art prior to the onslaught of histrionics that ensue.

One hundred and eight minutes later, as the movie ended, the friend I took—not a dancer—turned to me and asked in all seriousness, “Was that supposed to be camp?” There, on the screen, was a beautiful, bleeding-into-her-tutu Portman as the White Swan, uttering those portentous dying words: “Perfect . . . It was perfect.” As a dancer, I have never been so perfectly insulted.

I had thought when I read those words in the script, this is really stupid simple (the opposite of wicked smart, I would venture), but maybe Aronofsky has one of those things you hear film directors sometimes have: a vision. This was the vision? A dead ballerina in a bloody tutu with the caption “It was perfect”? He could not possibly be basing a film on a ballet dancer—the most fleet, complex, and powerful artist of the physical that exists—and the great 19th-century love story that is Tchaikovsky’s Swan Lake by reducing it to one crazy girl’s addiction to perfection. Or could he? Is this how he sees our art? Like a profession full of self-destructive addicts that need an A&E Intervention, a Dr. Phil “How’s it working for you?” talk, or an Oprah bailout? Aronofsky totally missed—or dismissed—the love story that is the raison d’être of the entire ballet and, instead, myopically latched on like a pit bull (and with the same finesse) to the White Swan/Madonna-Black Swan/whore dichotomy and then delivers his sophomoric dissertation with a sledgehammer. He does, however, clearly delineate his Cygnini discoveries: a White Swan masturbates in white grannie panties, while a Black Swan goes (black) thongless into the night. (Aronofsky clearly has a penchant for mutants: his next film is The Wolverine.)

Black Swan provides the most recent—though most egregious—example of the “ballerinas-are-victims” stance that certain good Samaritans love to embrace (“those dancers are too thin, they are just too too thin”) on occasion to aggrandize themselves, while patronizing those superb creatures whose absolute commitment to excellence they cannot understand. Ballet is the practice of physicalized morality, a poetic standard for every man and woman's ideal capacity," wrote Lincoln Kirstein, who founded the New York City Ballet with Balanchine. To imply that its proponents, dancers, are victims rather than teachers provides swift avoidance of that uncomfortable suggestion. Aronofsky has created a movie celebrating the failure of a ballerina, and by implication her entire art—disguised, insidiously, as a film about sacrifice and success.

As Black Swan so clearly demonstrates, one simply cannot “act” being a ballerina. It is a state of being, of feeling, of mind, an externalized expression of internalized discipline, faith, and good manners.

But I am too harsh. Perhaps Black Swan is simply Aronofsky’s bloody, melodramatic, nonsensical, middle-of-the-road, badly-written bid for box-office success after he tasted its heady brine with the success of the excellent The Wrestler. It could have been such rip-roaring good fun (see Jim Carrey's rendition from Saturday Night Live). And a real nice break from the dull, repetitive, hard work of a true ballerina. But then Black Swan isn’t a film about real ballerinas at all, no more than Jurassic Park is a film about real scientists (or real dinosaurs for that matter)—it merely exploits the locale, the props, and the outerwear. Balletploitation is born.

This brings us to Aronofsky’s heroine: his waify, whiny, bulimic little ballerina, Nina Sayers. Don’t you just love her? The little swan who simply couldn’t fly. And then we hear—over and over —that poor hard-working Natalie Portman had to actually lose weight and work really, really, hard—I mean really hard—for a number of months to pass, barely, as a professional dancer in the film, and only then between her neck and waist (don’t look further down: it isn’t there. Even her double—the one who actually did work really hard for several decades—is hardly on screen). A ballerina without her legs and feet is like a writer without words or a singer without a voice: not one. No wonder Portman looks so beleaguered in the film: she is perhaps the first amputee professional ballerina. But, hey, it’s Hollywood, and she has already won a Golden Globe and will likely garner an Oscar for her dorsal efforts. (Her upper-body-only performance does, however, enable her to wear the first strapless tutus in dance history.)

“The world of ballet,” Portman told French Vogue after making the film “is sick, sick, sick.” Portman, however, has bravely overcome her distaste and is marrying, and reproducing, into the profession all the same. Portman is a lovely actress of considerable accomplishment in other films, but here her one-note earnest angst, denoted by furrowed brow from start to finish, is entirely unlike any real ballerina—a woman who “must have the nobility of a five-star general,” as Agnes de Mille once said—rather than Portman’s insecure little misery. As Black Swan so clearly demonstrates, one simply cannot “act” being a ballerina. It is a state of being, of feeling, of mind, an externalized expression of internalized discipline, faith, and good manners. And of course, one needs those inconvenient legs and feet.

While the result is one almost hilariously sensationalistic movie (Aronofsky even misses being either high or low camp), I have a sneaking suspicion that the director wanted his film, at least in part, to be about the Birth of an Artist. He wants to bludgeon his tutu and wear it too. In straddling his themes—a serious film about the making of an artist, and Psycho at the ballet—he misses both, and flaps around in no swan’s lake.

This, of course, the public is lapping up, especially, I surmise, the vast audience caught in the fangs of vampire love (the Twilight books and movies, True Blood, The Vampire Diaries.) Black Swan has all the same seductive red, white and black elements of blood, innocence, and death delivered with risible solemnity and repressed sexuality. Nosferatu gets a tutu! Besides, there is nothing quite like white feathers and tulle to slowly absorb and spread the blood of a nice deep, suicide stigmata. And what did Nina stab herself with? Oh yes, a shard of her smashed dressing room mirror. I get it, I get it, the mirror murder, death of narcissism by narcissism (the buzzword for those obsessive ballerinas.)

I don’t care in the least that Aronofsky’s depiction of the ballet world and its anxious protagonists uses every blatant cliché about this rarified world, where anorexia, bulimia, self-mutilation, suppressed sexuality (but lots of attempted masturbation!), jealousy, stage mothers from hell, and vulgar, violent, lascivious company directors predominate. And don’t forget the requisite bloody toe close-up. Ewww! (For the record: A bloody toe for a ballerina is like a bruise for a boxer: ho-hum.)

Aronofsky displays neither respect, nor wonder, nor fascination, nor, alas, love for ballet in his film—he sees only half-clad wacko women: all four women in his mutilating misogynistic fetish are uber-crazy chicks. Predictably, he also repeats the truly absurd notion that a young female dancer needs drugs, alcohol, a wild tattooed girlfriend, and pick-up sex to the din of deafening disco music to “loosen up,” to be sexy and alluring on stage. This is a shameless manipulation (hello Hollywood!) to give regular teenage girls a point of connection to those rarified creatures. But the fact remains that reckless, self-destructive girls are simply not the ones who succeed in ballet—they are dropouts who must go to college. Aronofsky did, however, almost win me over with the prospect of skinny crazed lesbian ballerinas in sex scenes with themselves and each other (how else to get men to a movie about ballet?) But even here, the scenes are both passionless and humorless.

Despite all this—or, more likely, because of it—Nina Sayers is the first crazy ballerina to have reached across the elitist wall of the ballet convent into the general public’s awareness, since 1986 when our own bona fide great ballerina Gelsey Kirkland wrote her bestselling memoir Dancing On My Grave (could have been Aronofsky’s title). Kirkland’s real-life drama did include starvation, vomiting, drug addiction, rivals, failed plastic surgery, multiple obsessions, and bad sex with Baryshnikov. (Kirkland was diagnosed by the world-renowned analyst Dr. Otto Kernberg as having borderline personality disorder while under his inpatient care.) Suffice it to say that no real ballerina, Kirkland included, would survive, much less succeed, with such an illness. It is important to note that Kirkland was a very great ballerina before she unraveled—not, sadly, after.

What is even sadder is that the only glimpses of the ballet world that most of the general public sees—and then believes—are these extreme aberrations. I have heard it said of Black Swan’s popularity: “But at least ballet is going on people’s radar.” Better ballet stay off their radar, if so inaccurately represented as a world of insane perfectionists, rather than what it is: a world of masterful devotees to beauty.”

Toni Bentley danced with the New York City Ballet for 10 years and is the author of five books including “Winter Season, A Dancer’s Journal” and “The Surrender, An Erotic Memoir.” She is a Guggenheim Fellow, and her story “The Bad Lion” was recently published in “Best American Essays 2010."

7 comments:

  1. I think you missed the thrust of Ms Bentley's review with is encased (pun intended) in the title. I am not a dancer and don't have nearly the critical eye of someone who has trained in dance, and my reaction was the same. it was ballet exploitation and a strung out series of stereotypes about a genre and completely missed every salient point about ballet while dwelling on cartoon portrayal and trite themes. I has precisely the identical reaction and not being a dancer it was refreshing to read that others saw it the same way. I have read several other reviewers who had similar reactions and I won't reference them.

    Yes ballet people would love to see more ballet in a behind the scenes real life fictionalized drama. Billy Elliot, if I recall correctly managed to achieve some of this.

    The cartonlike conception of Odile and Odette was actually laughable to some reviewers who believe Aronofsky was making a campy comedy and were actually laughing through the movie.

    I saw it for what I think it was, a formulaic Hollywood exploitation effort. This is precisely in line (no pun intended) with the dumbing down and I'll call it the Hollywoodification of the American "taste" for film, art, literature and so forth. Sure there exists some incredible work being produced in the arts, film, literature, dance and so forth, but the mainstream has be trained to consume garbage and consider it art.

    Now some will say it's only entertainment and Las Vegas represents that in spades by the way with its fake Venice and fake everything from boobs, butts and bunnies. Why people find these attractive now is anyone's guess. I know this hits home for Jill's World where exploitation is deemed a perfectly honorable calling when when couched in the notion of elitism and so forth.

    I find under all the layers encasing (no pun intended) this kernel is the obsession with ego, money and hedonism. None of these are necessarily naughty, but when they are fed drugs as Hollywood and Vegas does it creates a very distorted and troubling (to me and others) message about the real world.

    J

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  2. With a due respect... There are plenty of talented dancers who could have trained as an actor...and there is plenty of acting skill required in story ballet.

    It's hard to imagine a dancer taking a year off at the peak of her career to act in a Hollywood flick, but many have time outs from injuries so the idea is not that unimaginable.

    No... they needed a name box office draw and so they created this phony narrative of Portman suffering for a year to get a bit of ballet in her bones and knock off a few pounds.

    This was a all Hollywood top to bottom and while it COULD have been an interesting movie it decidedly was not... as far as ballet is concerned. I would go so far as to guess that 99% of dancers and lovers of ballet would agree even if they liked the "thriller" campy horror flick thing.

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  3. “Yes ballet people would love to see more ballet in a behind the scenes real life fictionalized drama. Billy Elliot, if I recall correctly managed to achieve some of this.”

    Billy Elliot had some basis in fact and the film wasn’t supposed to be a psycho-thriller, but be uplifting.

    “I saw it for what I think it was, a formulaic Hollywood exploitation effort.”

    It certainly is! There was never any intention to make an art film, something some critics can’t seem to grasp. But I think far worse from your perspective is that it’s a SUCCESSFUL film!

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  4. I suppose that depends on how one measures success. To you apparently it's measured in dollars and cents and vapid awards given by Hollywood insiders to themselves to... sell films. Or a dumbed down uninformed public who see cinema as s place to eat popcorn and drink super sized cokes.

    I have no idea what Mr Aronosky's intention was aside from money and fame to leverage financing on his next money maker. Yes, Hollywood has virtually nothing to do with art and all to do with exploitation on so many levels.

    I suppose the sour taste that Ms Bentley and others have is that this exploitation was done at the expense of ballet, which despite all the flaws represents a rather high art form, made possible by people who dedicate their lives to it and none of this comes through in his portrayal.

    I don't care whether or not movies are successful. I do have an over arching concern about the destruction of the arts in America in particular which has elevated so much trash and made that the currency of our culture. It says more about who we are as a people and what we value.

    When you look at what cultures leave to the future, to understand what they valued, and compare it to what will be our legacy... it is being brought down by the love affair with entertainment over art and financial success as opposed to artistic achievement and excellence.

    Perhaps you need to write something about exploitation.

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  5. “It's hard to imagine a dancer taking a year off at the peak of her career to act in a Hollywood flick, but many have time outs from injuries so the idea is not that unimaginable.

    Actually, it is that unimaginable! I Cited Moira Shearer as the first, and last, A-list ballerina to have tried and although Red Shoes was a huge success it proved to be the start of the decline of her career in ballet, again because her contemporaries thought she was no longer ‘serious about her art’ and the competition within Saddlers Wells was too much for Margot Fonteyn who was the cash cow of the company at the time. A year off to have a baby is one thing. Ten months off to make a film that may or may not be a success and over which you have no control just isn’t something an A-list ballerina seems willing to do with ones dancing career at the top being so short, and rightly so.

    And, how exactly is a dancer recovering from an injury that would keep her from performing for 6 to 10 months supposed to dance in a film full out the way you seem to expect?

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  6. “I suppose the sour taste that Ms Bentley and others have is that this exploitation was done at the expense of ballet, which despite all the flaws represents a rather high art form, made possible by people who dedicate their lives to it and none of this comes through in his portrayal.”

    I just don’t see it that way. Actually there were several articles in the NYT that mentioned increased interest in NYCB’s version of Swan Lake last season because of all the press about Black Swan.

    Did you see the same film that I did? The entire film was about a dancer who had dedicated her life to her art and was so obsessed with perfection that she became mentally unstable. That does sound a lot like what happened to the ABT dancer mentioned in Ms. Bentley’s review, doesn’t it?

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  7. Oh course I saw the same film as you and millions of others saw. But I see it from my own perspective and sensibility and so like all things in life I see it different things and read different messages.

    Observations are informed by the knowledge and experience of the observer. When I go to ballet I don't see the same thing as say Tonya, or Michelle Wiles, or David Halberg does... How could I?

    But they don't see the same thing when they are in il Duomo or when they are sailing.

    Mysterious J

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Powys , Wales, United Kingdom
I'm a classically trained dancer and SAB grad. A Dance Captain and go-to girl overseeing high-roller entertainment for a major casino/resort