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8.0/10
2.6K
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A romantic relationship between a man and a half-woman, half-phoenix.A romantic relationship between a man and a half-woman, half-phoenix.A romantic relationship between a man and a half-woman, half-phoenix.
Pavlina Cervickova
- Ballerina
- (as Cervickova Pavlina)
Jade Clayton
- Ballerina
- (as Clayton Jade)
Romana Novotna
- Ballerina
- (as Novotna Romana)
Lucia Senkova
- Ballerina
- (as Senkova Lucia)
Hana Riegerova
- Ballerina
- (as Riegerova Hana)
Galina Sadirova
- Ballerina
- (as Sadirova Galina)
Lenka Bartunkova
- Ballerina
- (as Bartunkova Lenka)
Esther Lubadika
- Ballerina
- (as Lubadika Esther)
Lucie Pekna
- Ballerina
- (as Pekna Lucie)
Petra Slavikova
- Ballerina
- (as Slavikova Petra)
Sara Kocanova
- Ballerina
- (as Kocanova Sara)
Veronika Zitova
- Ballerina
- (as Zitova Veronika)
Nikola Márová
- Ballerina
- (as Marova Nikola)
Dominika Horova
- Ballerina
- (as Horova Dominika)
Barbora Tuckova
- Ballerina
- (as Tuckova Barbora)
Eva Ruzickova
- Ballerina
- (as Ruzickova Eva)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
Hate him or love him.
Kanye for a long time is a creative genius.
This non-gangster rapper owned the super known manipulated billboard charts from all his previous albums. Then Came this Dark beautiful album.
The album was dark yes, I loved the old Kanye but nevertheless the Album was another banger. After this well....i never bought another album from Kanye...which is a kind of lie because I bought the Kanye - Jay-z album and I didn't like it so it didn't listen to it. I have no idea where it is now.
Anyways
Runaway was a long ass music video/musical.
It told a dark story about Kanye and a demon. It had dancing, soul, and magic. The whole production was the best music video I've ever seen. It was both touching, sad and dark all at the same time.
Obviously Kanye can't act but yet he put on an epic show.
Overall, a solid production.
Verdict: This album was probably the last album CD that I ever bought. After this music and even Kanye went downhill. Kanye's latest stuff is a big racket.
Kanye for a long time is a creative genius.
This non-gangster rapper owned the super known manipulated billboard charts from all his previous albums. Then Came this Dark beautiful album.
The album was dark yes, I loved the old Kanye but nevertheless the Album was another banger. After this well....i never bought another album from Kanye...which is a kind of lie because I bought the Kanye - Jay-z album and I didn't like it so it didn't listen to it. I have no idea where it is now.
Anyways
Runaway was a long ass music video/musical.
It told a dark story about Kanye and a demon. It had dancing, soul, and magic. The whole production was the best music video I've ever seen. It was both touching, sad and dark all at the same time.
Obviously Kanye can't act but yet he put on an epic show.
Overall, a solid production.
Verdict: This album was probably the last album CD that I ever bought. After this music and even Kanye went downhill. Kanye's latest stuff is a big racket.
This film is pure genius. After watching this, I realized how complex of a person Kanye really is. The fact that he not only used his own music, but he also directed the film was unbelievable. He uses intense metaphoric language in the film and as a poet I found it rather exciting.
Kanye West is a rather divisive character – not just to the point where you either love him or hate him but even within one's else there are things you'll love about him as much as there are things to hate. For instance for me I really do like most of his music and think without doubt that he has real talent in this area and generally doesn't sit back on his laurels much. On the other side though, he can be a quite spectacular cock whether it be comparing himself to soldiers in terms of his service, storming the stage at an awards show and many other examples of a man with a massive ego and no reason to try to rein it in. I mention this because these two parts of him are very much on display in this short film which is at once good but also painful to watch.
The plot sees West directing himself in a story written by music director Hype Williams (that noise you hear is an alarm bell); his character Griffin is out driving through woods when a beautiful Phoenix falls from the sky in a ball of fire. He takes her into his awesome house and watches as she marvels at nature in the garden – chasing sheep and rabbits with wide eyes. He tries to make her welcome and loved but perhaps she is too different for his world? As an idea it already seems corny and indeed the delivery of it mostly is. The dialogue is howlingly bad, with the final speech about "your world" and having to burn being a real cringe throughout. In this sense it really feels like poetry that every teenager has written thinking it is profound – which it is to them, but terrible to everyone else.
Visually West does a good job aside from some poor coloring of skies etc in some scenes. His camera moves well and he is best when directing sections which feel like music videos and this is where the film is best – the music. I like most of these tracks and mostly they work well and the imagery works well with them – in particular the use of ballet dancers being a simple but effective scene. A shame that it tries to be more than this though, because it doesn't work in terms of being arty or meaningful and the harder it tries the harder it fails.
The performances outside of the music video bits are poor. West mostly stands looking profound except when he performs and he has no chemistry with Ebanks, mainly because he seems more intent on being "deep". Ebanks deserves some credit for bravely going with the film and doing what is asked of her; although the sight of her being "amazed" by a rabbit or a leaf is a hard sell for anyone far less a swimwear model. When she is asked to focus on image and the camera she does well, but all else she is poor and her dialogue stilted – a stunning woman for sure, but seeing her screaming at the sight of a cooked pheasant was funny and I don't think that was the goal. The script and story is the biggest problem though and Hype Williams shows us again that while he may be great at music videos, there is a reason why Belly was so awful and why he has yet to come back to make another attempt at a film.
Runaway has good music and West fans will enjoy it for that – hell, they may even be fans enough to go with the silly "profound" story and all the content with it. For me though it was laughably embarrassing with all the depth and profundity of recently dumped teenager writing poetry in their bedroom.
The plot sees West directing himself in a story written by music director Hype Williams (that noise you hear is an alarm bell); his character Griffin is out driving through woods when a beautiful Phoenix falls from the sky in a ball of fire. He takes her into his awesome house and watches as she marvels at nature in the garden – chasing sheep and rabbits with wide eyes. He tries to make her welcome and loved but perhaps she is too different for his world? As an idea it already seems corny and indeed the delivery of it mostly is. The dialogue is howlingly bad, with the final speech about "your world" and having to burn being a real cringe throughout. In this sense it really feels like poetry that every teenager has written thinking it is profound – which it is to them, but terrible to everyone else.
Visually West does a good job aside from some poor coloring of skies etc in some scenes. His camera moves well and he is best when directing sections which feel like music videos and this is where the film is best – the music. I like most of these tracks and mostly they work well and the imagery works well with them – in particular the use of ballet dancers being a simple but effective scene. A shame that it tries to be more than this though, because it doesn't work in terms of being arty or meaningful and the harder it tries the harder it fails.
The performances outside of the music video bits are poor. West mostly stands looking profound except when he performs and he has no chemistry with Ebanks, mainly because he seems more intent on being "deep". Ebanks deserves some credit for bravely going with the film and doing what is asked of her; although the sight of her being "amazed" by a rabbit or a leaf is a hard sell for anyone far less a swimwear model. When she is asked to focus on image and the camera she does well, but all else she is poor and her dialogue stilted – a stunning woman for sure, but seeing her screaming at the sight of a cooked pheasant was funny and I don't think that was the goal. The script and story is the biggest problem though and Hype Williams shows us again that while he may be great at music videos, there is a reason why Belly was so awful and why he has yet to come back to make another attempt at a film.
Runaway has good music and West fans will enjoy it for that – hell, they may even be fans enough to go with the silly "profound" story and all the content with it. For me though it was laughably embarrassing with all the depth and profundity of recently dumped teenager writing poetry in their bedroom.
10Derache
The discontent that is shown on his face.
What it means is not supposed to be finite. It is a love story. It has many versions of songs that it would typically not have. This is true art. A true musical.
However you take this, is totally dependent on yourself. It is filled with symbolization and metaphors, but there is no true way to know what they all actually mean.
A beautiful dark twisted fantasy.
However you take this, is totally dependent on yourself. It is filled with symbolization and metaphors, but there is no true way to know what they all actually mean.
A beautiful dark twisted fantasy.
Did you know
- TriviaKanye west funded the short film personally.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Kanye West Feat. Pusha T: Runaway (2010)
- SoundtracksDark Fantasy
(uncredited)
Performed by Ye featuring Nicki Minaj
Written by Ye, RZA, No I.D., Jeff Bhasker, Mike Dean, Malik Yusef, Jon Anderson, Mike Oldfield
Produced by RZA, Ye and No I.D.
Additional production by Jeff Bhasker and Mike Dean
Contains samples of "In High Places"
Performed by Mike Oldfield
Written by Jon Anderson and Mike Oldfield
Details
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