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The Company
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Movie Review
The Company (PG-13)
Kit Bowen
Movie Info
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Hollywood.com Says
Although it offers hardly any story to speak of,
Robert Altman
's
The Company
still presents a gorgeous, birds-eye view of day-to-day life in Chicago's Joffrey Ballet.
Story
The Company
is all about the dance. What little plot there is centers on Ry (
Neve Campbell
), a young dancer on the verge of becoming a principal with Chicago's Joffrey Ballet who becomes romantically involved with an up and coming chef (
James Franco
). While she works her ass off proving to the company's eccentric leader, Alberto Antonelli (
Malcolm McDowell
), that she has the stuff, we see through her eyes all the hard work and disappointments that go on behind the scenes. We also get to meet a variety of colorful characters in the lively ballet company, including the older diva who refuses to learn anything new, the eager fledglings who room together to make ends meet, the over-the-top choreographers and the company's no-nonsense administrators. Played mostly by real-life Joffrey dancers and company members, these small glimpses sometimes leave you wanting more, but for the most part, the lack of narrative doesn't diminish the impact of watching the incredible dancers at work.
Acting
If you didn't know
Neve Campbell
could dance, you'll soon find out she can. TV's
Party of Five
star initially studied to be a ballet dancer and, based on her own experiences as young performer with Canada's National School of Ballet, came up with the idea for
The Company
with screenwriter Barbara Turner, and agreed to serve as producer in addition to starring in the film. To prepare for the role after being off pointe for nearly ten years,
Campbell
had to train extensively for two straight years with Joffrey--and her obvious hard work pays off. Her big number--a sexy, romantic
pas de deux
with Joffrey dancer Domingo Rubio to a haunting rendition of "My Funny Valentine--is truly spectacular, especially since they dance it on an outdoor stage during a thunderstorm.
McDowell
also chews it up as Antonelli--who is loosely based on the real-life Joffrey director Gerald Arpino--calling everyone "my little babies" and expounding on the thrill of doing allegros.
Direction
Ballet really isn't just about tutus and
Swan Lake
anymore.
Altman
says he wanted to do
The Company
because he wanted to take the world of dancing--which he believes most people think of as ethereal, beautiful, vulnerable, expressive and seemingly impossible--and show the contradictions. These dancers work
hard
at what they do, with bloodied feet and bruised, torn bodies, for apparently very little money: Ry has a second job as a cocktail waitress, for example.
Altman
accomplishes his mission--and throws in his own distinctive touches as well--yet he keeps the spectacle of the dance performances always in view. He opens with a modern dance number using crisscrossing ribbons for props, and as the film progresses, each dance sequence is more and more unique until
Altman
's camera seems a bit dizzying, whirling around almost too much.
The Company
culminates in a large, colorful
The Lion King
-like production, which we see being rehearsed throughout the film (the scene where the unconventional choreographer explain his "vision" for the ballet is particularly hysterical). It all comes to together beautifully, leaving the audiences, especially those who love ballet, yelling "Bravo!"
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