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Black Swan
A journey through the psyche of a young ballerina whose starring role as the duplicitous swan queen turns out to be a part for which she becomes frighteningly perfect.
Release : | 2010 |
Rating : | 8 |
Studio : | Fox Searchlight Pictures, Dune Entertainment, Protozoa Pictures, |
Crew : | Art Department Coordinator, Art Direction, |
Cast : | Natalie Portman Mila Kunis Vincent Cassel Barbara Hershey Winona Ryder |
Genre : | Drama Horror Thriller |
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Reviews
The plot isn't so bad, but the pace of storytelling is too slow which makes people bored. Certain moments are so obvious and unnecessary for the main plot. I would've fast-forwarded those moments if it was an online streaming. The ending looks like implying a sequel, not sure if this movie will get one
A great movie, one of the best of this year. There was a bit of confusion at one point in the plot, but nothing serious.
While it doesn't offer any answers, it both thrills and makes you think.
The film never slows down or bores, plunging from one harrowing sequence to the next.
This movie has so much sexual assault and abuse in it that I could barely watch it. It's better as a moral story to call the police and not trust creepy dance teachers.
The most compelling moments in 'Black Swan (2010)' come when the sanity of the central character is called into question, with several sequences featuring stunningly surreal imagery and bizarre body horror that means that the validity of almost anything onscreen can be questioned. Rather than becoming frustrating, this instead becomes a gripping look into the damaged psyche of the perfectionist protagonist. The story is compellingly told with a confident cinematic verve. 8/10
If you love ballet and horror this is a perfect combination. Every character is well played and terrifying good... This horror movie which it is , you can see serveral times and never gets dull
Movie Review: "Black Swan" (2010)World-premiering at the 67th edition of the Venice Film Festival a reprising experience after winning the "Golden Lion" in 2008 for another explicit character study of "The Wrestler" starring Mickey Rourke as run-down self-described "broke-down piece of meat", here director Darren Aronofsky gets lucky with leading actress Natalie Portman, at age 28, practicing "Ballet Dancing" as psychologically-playing her heart out to extreme confrontations with sublime supporting characters from Vincent Cassel as attacking hardcore-dance-teacher Leroy, Mila Kunis as Lily, given face to an overly-made-up "Black Swan" in moments of disturbing horror inter-cutting flashes from the director's lesbian love fantasies over hands-on violent pushings to plain paranoia followings in ultra-dark portrayal of New York City by night with long-term director collaborating cinematographer Matthew Libatique of just being in his element of this fairly low-budget production of a 13-Million-US-Dollar captured on a Super 16mm / HD digital raw footage, then extraordinary mingled in a ditgital-enhanced computer-generated imagery indulging post-production process with Jon Avnet executive producing and Scott Franklin as acting porducer, having Director Darren Aronofsky's back in an instant-classic Psycho-Thriller motion picture, flawlees in its 100 minutes final cut reception, while hidden actions of tension loss, especially in under-directed scenes with unless capable Hollywood veterean actresses Babara Hershey and Winona Ryder as "The Dying Swan", which costs Aronofsky a desirable major Award for directing in filmmaking since early Black-and-White menace film "Pi" premiering at Sundance Film Festival in its 16th edition in January 1998.Copyright 2018 Cinemajesty Entertainments LLC