IMDb-BEWERTUNG
7,6/10
15.310
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Merab hat schon in jungen Jahren mit seiner Tanzpartnerin Mary am National Georgian Ensemble trainiert. Seine Welt stellt sich auf den Kopf, als der unbekümmerte Irakli eintrifft und zu sein... Alles lesenMerab hat schon in jungen Jahren mit seiner Tanzpartnerin Mary am National Georgian Ensemble trainiert. Seine Welt stellt sich auf den Kopf, als der unbekümmerte Irakli eintrifft und zu seinem stärksten Rivalen und Begehren wird.Merab hat schon in jungen Jahren mit seiner Tanzpartnerin Mary am National Georgian Ensemble trainiert. Seine Welt stellt sich auf den Kopf, als der unbekümmerte Irakli eintrifft und zu seinem stärksten Rivalen und Begehren wird.
- Auszeichnungen
- 29 Gewinne & 26 Nominierungen insgesamt
Ana Makharadze
- Sopo
- (as Anano Makharadze)
Nino Gabisonia
- Ninutsa
- (as Ninutsa Gabisonia)
Eka Mzhavanadze
- Aurora
- (as Eka Mzhavandze)
Empfohlene Bewertungen
There is no sexuality in Georgian dance. There is also no place for individuality, nor for weakness. There is tradition, there is pride for the country. And nothing more. Using the beautiful traditional male Georgian dance as a metaphor, Levan Akin's 'And then We Danced' explores themes of fragile masculinity and sexuality in a way that is refreshing, organic, and powerful. This gorgeously lensed film also offers tender and warm story about identity, self-discovery, first love and sexual awakening, led by an outstanding performance from Levan Gelbakhiani.
...to present and explore a story of prejudice and the resistance of out of touch traditions, mindsets and perceptions to an individuals right to be who they are. Beautifully orchestrated and choreographed, engaging performances all round, genuinely sincere, honest and believable (unfortunately).
There's something pretty powerful about a story of gay sexual awakening put into the backdrop of a film that shows so many aspects of traditional Georgian culture. It was pretty courageous too, given the anti-LGBT conservatism that has a hold on the country. A young man (Levan Gelbakhiani) faces the challenges of poverty, a broken home, and chasing the difficult dream of becoming a dancer for the National Ensemble. He meets a rival dancer (Bachi Valishvili) and the two begin training together, leading to friendship and deeper feelings, which represent a challenge of their own.
I loved the glimpse into Georgian culture (dance, music, food, weddings, etc), and confess I would have liked even more of it. I also wish the dance sequences hadn't been as edited as they were - there is so much natural power and grace in these moves, and I think just holding the camera still at mid-distance for longer periods of time would have served them better. With that said, the real story here is about coming of age and gay in such a conservative country, and there the film shines. It exercises restraint by showing emerging love simply and honestly and not spending a lot of time mocking the homophobic men who menace at the outskirts. It does gets in a nice little dig in at the hypocrisy of the Orthodox Church by recounting the story of a priest responsible for "fixing" another dancer who had to leave the group because he was gay, and ended up having sex with him instead.
The cast is uniformly very good if not great, and couple of my favorite scenes were the moments with the sweet grandmas of both young men. Another is the touching moment between brothers, trying to reconcile the traditional path with nonconformity and still love one another. Lastly, the final dance sequence, showing grit and bravado but making it clear that he's personalized the dance, is stirring, and the film ends strong.
I loved the glimpse into Georgian culture (dance, music, food, weddings, etc), and confess I would have liked even more of it. I also wish the dance sequences hadn't been as edited as they were - there is so much natural power and grace in these moves, and I think just holding the camera still at mid-distance for longer periods of time would have served them better. With that said, the real story here is about coming of age and gay in such a conservative country, and there the film shines. It exercises restraint by showing emerging love simply and honestly and not spending a lot of time mocking the homophobic men who menace at the outskirts. It does gets in a nice little dig in at the hypocrisy of the Orthodox Church by recounting the story of a priest responsible for "fixing" another dancer who had to leave the group because he was gay, and ended up having sex with him instead.
The cast is uniformly very good if not great, and couple of my favorite scenes were the moments with the sweet grandmas of both young men. Another is the touching moment between brothers, trying to reconcile the traditional path with nonconformity and still love one another. Lastly, the final dance sequence, showing grit and bravado but making it clear that he's personalized the dance, is stirring, and the film ends strong.
For director the one challenge is to shoot a film about LGBTQ issue and not to dramatize script, another is to take Georgian film about the same issue and do not express a enormous wave of aggression to homophobia and to catch the balance. If you ask me why I will answer: In Georgia plenty people are on the side of homophobia. From my point of view the main problem is that they think LGBTQ people are strangers, they live somewhere not near them, not in their families, not in their neighborhood or in the circles of friends. They think gays are some savage, immoral people without families or normal lives.
And then there is the movie AND THEN WE DANCED. Director is catching the balance, it doesn't show any aggression, it only tells that gay people are between us, as normal as anyone and we only need to face that and to be humane.
The film is kind and emotional. RECOMMEND! Maybe after watching this film people haunted by homophobia will rethink the issue.
And then there is the movie AND THEN WE DANCED. Director is catching the balance, it doesn't show any aggression, it only tells that gay people are between us, as normal as anyone and we only need to face that and to be humane.
The film is kind and emotional. RECOMMEND! Maybe after watching this film people haunted by homophobia will rethink the issue.
If you want a different, warm, gripping and engaging drama - this is the movie! This heartwarming story from Georgia is a charmbomb. Incredibly well filmed with the storytelling taking place in Tiblisi. We follow a young man's encounter with his first love, in unfamiliar surroundings (at least for me). Great performances by these young actors make it both poignant and believable. I think the protagonist of the film clearly manages to show the challenges of being gay, in an environment that is clearly not ready for it. The film's message of what love and sorrow does to us is universal, but the place and surroundings this takes place in this film, lift it up and make it a special and touching experience in the cinema. Thanks to the Oslo Fusion Film Festival setting up this one, I hope it gets wide release worldwide. A warm recommendation from me.
Wusstest du schon
- WissenswertesThe filmmakers initially asked the prestigious Sukhishvili Georgian National Ballet for support, only to be declined immediately and told "homosexuality does not exist in Georgia". The head of the company then notified other dance companies in Georgia of the film and told them not to cooperate with it, which severely hindered the film.
- VerbindungenFeatured in MsMojo: Top 10 Most Underrated Ballet Scenes in Movies (2024)
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- Erscheinungsdatum
- Herkunftsländer
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- And Then We Danced
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Box Office
- Bruttoertrag in den USA und Kanada
- 177.262 $
- Eröffnungswochenende in den USA und in Kanada
- 13.880 $
- 9. Feb. 2020
- Weltweiter Bruttoertrag
- 621.446 $
- Laufzeit
- 1 Std. 53 Min.(113 min)
- Farbe
- Seitenverhältnis
- 1.78 : 1
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