Starring: Natalie Portman, Vincent Cassel, Mila Kunis, Barbara Hershey, Winona Ryder
Directed By: Darren Aronofsky
Run Time: 1 hr 43 minutes
Black Swan is about a ballerina (played by Portman) who lands the prima ballerina role in Swan Lake. The stress of being the lead plus the newcomer to the troupe (played by Kunis) take its toll on Nina. The line between fiction (of the story of the ballet) and reality become blurred in Nina's mind. She starts seeing things that may not - or may - be there.
I went to the first movie of the year with Jeffrey! This first viewing also brings about the first controversy in our house. If you know the story of Swan Lake, the swan commits suicide at the end because she can't be with the man she loves. The end of this movie is the actual ballet, with Nina as the lead, and the movie ends with ambiguity. If you've seen The Wrestler, which is directed by the same director as this movie, you'll remember that Randy stands on the ropes and then the movie cuts to white. Did he jump and die? Did he not jump and presumably live? Or did he jump and actually live? Black Swan ends very similarly - with Nina as the swan making a swan dive (ha). Her swan dies (while she falls onto some padding designed to catch her fall) in the ballet. We then have to decide if Nina, too, dies. The movie cuts to black, leaving her fate up to the audience. I believe she lived and that her mortality was just in her head as the stress finally consumes her; Jeff believes she died. We do see blood. But, of course, it's not the first time Nina saw blood that wasn't really there (cue the awful, awful scene in the bathroom where she rips back the skin on her finger only to discover a second later that there's nothing wrong with her finger at all).
You may think that it's a bit unconventional to give away the ending - and give it away in the first paragraph of the review - but like I said, if you know the story of Swan Lake, you know the story of Black Swan, minus the insanity and the crazy stage mother. Watch for it yourself and decide (and let me know what you think!).
As I alluded to in my first review paragraph, this movie is a bit of a psychological thriller. It was really intense. Nina, sadly, falls deeper and deeper into a realm where she can't distinguish between reality and stress. Her mother (played by Hershey), a former ballerina herself, fuels the insanity fires. There is a very thin line between reality and imagination. The line becomes almost indistinguishable for Nina... and for the audience. Did that really happen? How much of that happened? It's very intense.
One thing I find fascinating about this movie is that Mila Kunis couldn't dance before this movie. She had to learn it (or as she says, fake it). Interesting.
This is a good movie. I've read some critics ripping on it. Yes, there are some corny lines but the drama, the tension, is fascinating. I liked it. Jeff did, too. We both liked it. That must say something!
Note: And now that Natalie Portman has won the Oscar for Best Actress, you really must see it.
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