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17 of 17 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Flawed but Fun, June 27, 2000
This review is from: Bolshoi Ballet 67 (DVD)
This semi-documentary film about the Bolshoi Ballet has flaws, but there are enough good performances and interesting classroom scenes to make it fun to watch. Unfortunately, the scenes that supposedly document the offstage activities of the dancers and students are very staged and sometimes laughable, and I found the score that accompanied the choreographed classroom scenes irritating. It's also frustrating that the format isn't letterboxed, so in the excerpts of films the dancers occasionally disappear. Several complete pieces are presented--"Ravel Waltzes," with Ekaterina Maximova, "Paganini," with Natalia Bessmertnova, and Ravel's "Bolero," with an ever-growing host of dancers stamping their way up and down stairs. For me, the best was the last: a Russian festival scene and gypsy dance from the ballet "The Stone Flower." The gypsy woman is performed by Natalia Kasatkina, one of the Bolshoi's best character dancers, the pas de deux features radiant ballerina Raisa Struchkova (who starred in the Bolshoi's filmed version of "Cinderella" in 1961), and there's plenty of Russian character dancing. Compare this video with three documentaries about the Kirov, Russia's other famous ballet company: "Children of Theatre Street" (1978), "Backstage at the Kirov" (1984) and "The Leningrad Legend" (1989). There are also two full-length productions of "The Stone Flower," the Bolshoi version (1990) and the Kirov version (1991).
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9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
The right attitude, August 26, 2000
This review is from: Bolshoi Ballet 67 (DVD)
The right attitude: discipline, seriousness, concentration on the work with great love. The right use of music, the ability of dancers who know how to listen to music, through a great tradition of classical ballet. Dancing with the whole body from finger to toe, with full coordination, full involvement and full identification. These dancers have nothing to hide. I also like watching class of dancers who do not need to cover anything, not by customs, not by speed, not by effects. They have nothing to hide, they are responsible for every movement, and their honesty is convincing. The movements are very clean and precise, even the most simple one, as said in the DVD: "the simplest things are the most difficult and the most beautiful". I like the use of the camera and it's ability in Ravel's Bolero. I like the dance and it's original interpretation of the Crescendo with spanish dignity. This DVD shows the Bolshoi from a different point of view, and when we see what George Balanchine did with the New York City Ballet, adding to these materials the American spirit of freedom, we always have to remember the origins.
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4.0 out of 5 stars
Old Gold, April 19, 2010
This review is from: Bolshoi Ballet 67 (DVD)
When reviewing this DVD, one has to note the fact that this was a creation of the 1960s. Given the era and the exposure of the Soviet Union to tastes outside its own world, this is a balanced and worthwhile production, if compared with the other Sovietski stuff that used to make the rounds those days. Being in a third world country, we were pounded by propaganda both from the USIS as well as the Russian Culture Centers apart from British Councils and Alliance Francaise, and this movie came in as a breath of fresh air. Not that the USIS and the BBC productions were so great either. Apart from the edited full length ballets from Bolshoi et al that were shown in regular movie theaters, I guess this one stood out - revealing a lot about ballet to those who were just about getting initiated into the art. Thankfully, ballet music was available in plenty on vinyl, so understanding the dances was not a problem. The Soviets had to package stuff that would be dazzling and easily comprehensible to people in other countries like ours, and this movie did its job quite brilliantly. YES, in comparison with some of the productions (post 1980) of Soviet ballet, this one pales a bit. However, we get to see gems like Maximova and the three small clips from Don Quixote, Giselle etc.... which honestly stand out even today as showpieces compared to the modern ballerinas. In deference to one of the reviewers here who has lauded a version of Bolero by Plisetskaya (Bejart's), I would any day watch this one, however tacky it may be. The so called fantastic version by Bejart is nothing but an extension of rhythmic gymnastics that is passed off as 'modern'. I honestly think the one on this DVD will be far more appreciated even at the cost of one's tastes being dubbed as 'pedestrian'for quite some time to come. For a film that was shot in or around 1966-67, the copy is very clear although the sound is perhaps a little over-processed and shrieky; far better than some of the 1980s productions that are doing the rounds without a shred of reprocessing of the picture quality that one can do easily today. I would recommend this one to just about any lover of ballet, even as a collector's item.
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