AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
7,1/10
9,2 mil
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
Uma bailaria americana enfrenta duros desafios e precisa se superar a cada dia para provar seu talento ao ser aceita no prestigioso Ballet Bolshoi.Uma bailaria americana enfrenta duros desafios e precisa se superar a cada dia para provar seu talento ao ser aceita no prestigioso Ballet Bolshoi.Uma bailaria americana enfrenta duros desafios e precisa se superar a cada dia para provar seu talento ao ser aceita no prestigioso Ballet Bolshoi.
- Direção
- Roteirista
- Artistas
- Prêmios
- 8 vitórias e 11 indicações no total
Avaliações em destaque
American ballet dancer Joy Womack fights tooth and nail to be accepted into Moscow's infamously tough Bolshoi Ballet Academy, with the dream of becoming a prima ballerina.
The obvious comparison is to Black Swan. Both films tell of the rigours and trials of training, becoming a ballerina, and then achieving greatness. Only a tiny proportion of ballerinas achieve great success, and this is about overcoming sabotage as well as politics and of course...training harder than anyone else.
Both films show the dark side and the bright side of ballet although arguably The American has fewer dancing scenes.
Talia Ryder is perfect in the role as Natalie Portman was in Black Swan. I totally believed in her dream, I believed in her ability to achieve it, and I believed that inside her she was born a dancer.
I wonder how much of the story is actual fact? Much of it is apparently, including the corruption allegations. This is how great the film was. It has made me question every aspect of it, and research Joy Womack's life so I get to know more about her, and generally have a more positive opinion of how difficult it is to become a great ballerina.
Fabulous film, I gave it a solid 8.
The obvious comparison is to Black Swan. Both films tell of the rigours and trials of training, becoming a ballerina, and then achieving greatness. Only a tiny proportion of ballerinas achieve great success, and this is about overcoming sabotage as well as politics and of course...training harder than anyone else.
Both films show the dark side and the bright side of ballet although arguably The American has fewer dancing scenes.
Talia Ryder is perfect in the role as Natalie Portman was in Black Swan. I totally believed in her dream, I believed in her ability to achieve it, and I believed that inside her she was born a dancer.
I wonder how much of the story is actual fact? Much of it is apparently, including the corruption allegations. This is how great the film was. It has made me question every aspect of it, and research Joy Womack's life so I get to know more about her, and generally have a more positive opinion of how difficult it is to become a great ballerina.
Fabulous film, I gave it a solid 8.
I saw this in a relatively packed theatre, and the audience responses to it were so intense that a couple behind me started almost yelling at the screen during certain moments.
The story is based on Joy Womack, the American dancer who danced at the Bolshoi, and it seems to follow a relatively straightforward narrative initially. But once things start going wrong, it felt like a rollercoaster ride dropping into a relentless series of unpredictable twists and turns. I won't say much more for the sake of not giving spoilers, but suffice to say, I was constantly on the edge of my seat, and it felt very gripping right to the very end. I was literally holding my breath in parts.
The performances are extremely strong, particularly from Talia Ryder and Diane Kruger. It is visually stunning to look at, and features quite incredible direction at times from director (and writer) James Napier Robertson - who made another favourite film of mine, The Dark Horse. The music is beautiful, and very emotional.
The only warning I would give is this would not be for a younger audience, and might be a little too intense at times for some more sensitive audiences. It gets quite confronting at times.
The final imagery has stayed burned into my mind for days after the screening. Very powerful.
Highly recommend!
The story is based on Joy Womack, the American dancer who danced at the Bolshoi, and it seems to follow a relatively straightforward narrative initially. But once things start going wrong, it felt like a rollercoaster ride dropping into a relentless series of unpredictable twists and turns. I won't say much more for the sake of not giving spoilers, but suffice to say, I was constantly on the edge of my seat, and it felt very gripping right to the very end. I was literally holding my breath in parts.
The performances are extremely strong, particularly from Talia Ryder and Diane Kruger. It is visually stunning to look at, and features quite incredible direction at times from director (and writer) James Napier Robertson - who made another favourite film of mine, The Dark Horse. The music is beautiful, and very emotional.
The only warning I would give is this would not be for a younger audience, and might be a little too intense at times for some more sensitive audiences. It gets quite confronting at times.
The final imagery has stayed burned into my mind for days after the screening. Very powerful.
Highly recommend!
Absolutely exquisite dancing. Diane Kruger and the lead dance Talia as the American are so incredibly beautiful to watch. Their grace and balletic postures and figures make this a true depiction of ballet. The director and the actresses really did take us to Russia, and to the ballet. The story is absolutely amazing, and I was delighted to see the ballerina Natalia Osipova featured as herself, and hear that Joy Womack was the Talia Ryder's body double in some of the scenes as well as her trainer. This gives such authenticity to this gorgeous movie. I preferred it to Black Swan which is one of my best.
"Black Swan" was the definitive story of a ballerina spiralling into madness under the prolonged pressures of competition, physical wear and injury, and emotional insecurity. While Joy Womack narrowly avoids total destruction, "The American" just adds the cultural and political stressors without differentiating the styles of training and ballet between Russian and American schools. That would have been more telling than the unrelenting scenes of Joy Wormack's furrowed brow, tears and smeared mascara. Diane Kruger rescued this otherwise tedious litany with her portrayal of a tough taskmaster but the male dancer Womack marries (Nik) provides the only emotional relief and humanity in this maudlin tale.
Thus movie touched me in many ways but on the top the beauty and acting of Talia Ryder. She remained soul of this movie throughout and non any other character even close to her and I gave 6/10 to this movie just because of Talia. The charm of the movie was all gone as soon as you realize that none other were actually Russians and all are Ukranians or European took part in this movie so their Russian and English both were pathetic and Russians must have been laughing about it while watching this movie. Further the film is made in Poland so it totally lost its charm as picturizing such a movie with Russians and on original locations would have made some sense and perhaps then this movie may score 8-9 out 10.
Você sabia?
- CuriosidadesTalia Ryder is a classically trained dancer; however, for some scenes, Joy Womack was Ryder's dance double, as well as her coach during filming.
- Citações
Tatiyana Volkova: A great dancer knows her life is devoted utterly to ballet ... or not at all, they know pain ... is their friend, their companion, without which nothing will be achieved, not beauty, not talent, not greatness. The day you wake up without pain ... is the day you are no longer a dancer.
- Trilhas sonorasThe Carnival of the Animals: XIII. The Swan
written by Saint-Saens
performed by Stephen De Pledge & Ashley Brown
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- How long is The American?Fornecido pela Alexa
Detalhes
Bilheteria
- Orçamento
- US$ 8.000.000 (estimativa)
- Faturamento bruto mundial
- US$ 433.308
- Tempo de duração1 hora 50 minutos
- Cor
- Proporção
- 2.35 : 1
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What is the Canadian French language plot outline for Joika: Uma Americana no Bolshoi (2023)?
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