Bolshoi Babylon
Bolshoi Babylon
| 14 September 2015 (USA)
Bolshoi Babylon Trailers

A behind-the-scenes look at Moscow's prestigious Bolshoi Theatre as it's rocked by an acid-attack scandal in 2013.

Reviews
Ulf Kjell Gür

Russians like to advise. Russians also like to mythologize their present. Trying to tell you what Russia is, how it is ruled, controlled and where they are heading. - You know nothing. You are so naive. Is something you often get to hear from an the insightful, conscious and urbane Russian. "Bolshoi Babylon" is trying to tell the story of going too far. To trample over the Russian line that marks what should be witnessed by the world of their internal affairs. Vlad Urin plays this role with great experiment and passion. Sergei Filin not so much. Bolshoi Theatre has lately shocked the ballet world by canceling the premiere of a biographical show about the dancer Rudolf Nureyev at the last minute. The unusually outspoken director of Nureyev was Kirill Serebrennikov has been questioned in a criminal investigation. действие!

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l_rawjalaurence

To western audiences, the Bolshoi Ballet conjures up images of perfectly formed dancers pirouetting round the stage in memorable productions of SWAN LAKE. Or perhaps they might remember how the company became embroiled in political struggles, when dancers such as Rudolf Nureyev defected to the West in the early Sixties.Nick Read and Mark Franchetti's fascinating behind-the-scenes documentary looks at backstage life in the wake of the 2013 scandal, when director of productions Sergei Filin was the victim of a horrific attack by having acid thrown in his face. His sight was miraculously preserved, but not without a lot of pain and suffering as well as extensive surgery.What we discover from BOLSHOI BABYLON is that Filin was embroiled in a continual conflict of personalities. Some members of the company have overweening ambition and are prepared to stoop to anything to achieve their aims. Directors and other managers are often regarded suspiciously by members of the corps de ballet; the division between the two groups, it seems, is irreconcilable. The Bolshoi company is run by a complicated alliance between the General Director Vladimir Urin, the chief administrator Anatoliy Iksanov, and the Russian government, which takes a direct role in financing and administering it. In a revealing interview, Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev confirms the Bolshoi's role as a leading instrument of government propaganda both at home and abroad; the interests of art and politics are indivisible.In this kind of environment, it is hardly surprising that disagreements occur. There are some memorable quotations: one dancer suggests that Russians are very fond of giving advice, but are reluctant to carry it out. There are a plethora of armchair critics but no one really wants to rock the boat. When somebody does make such efforts, conflict is inevitable; there is a climactic sequence where Filin is abruptly asked to sit down during a staff meeting, just as he is about to launch into a tirade against his superiors.Meanwhile the company continues to produce high quality work on stage - a tribute, perhaps, to their professionalism in the face of adversity. The Bolshoi will sustain its international reputation, even if its personnel changes - a note at the film's end indicates that senior managers have managed to achieve their aims, even if it leads to the departure of some talented people.BOLSHOI BABYLON has a certain ghoulish charm, but this is by no means exclusive to the Russians. In the Nineties the BBC showed a series on life backstage at the Royal Opera House, Covent Garden, which was equally riven with conflict. Perhaps ballet takes so much out of its practitioners that it inevitably gives rise to personality clashes.

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bpladybug

If you are interested in the arts, and specifically Ballet then you will find this fascinating. The intrigue, the jealousy, the drama, the pain and struggle. It makes football look tame.I have some exposure to Ballet, as an audience member, but also I had a roommate for four years who danced in a German company. I spent some time back stage standing and watching performances up close. There was a lot of romantic triangles, drama, jealousy, injury, favoritism, and perpetual competition for roles. I was a singer and opera was intense but nothing is as competitive as ballet and their careers are so short.I highly recommend this documentary.

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