Styleforum › Forums › General › Entertainment and Culture › Black Swan
New Posts  All Forums:Forum Nav:

Black Swan - Page 3

post #31 of 171
Quote:
Originally Posted by Arrogant Bastard View Post
I have heard there is no nudity in the lez-boat scenes. If this is true, I have no further interest in the film.

thumbs down.
post #32 of 171
I read that reactions and reviews of the movie are very much divided by age. People over 50 disliked the movie, often intensely, while people under 50 liked it a lot. Since I'm closing in on 69, guess I know which side that puts me.

Also, the fact that there was no nudity in the lesbo scene was a deal-breaker for me as well.
post #33 of 171
i'm 29 and i thought the movie sucked. i also hate natalie portman though
post #34 of 171
Quote:
Originally Posted by DerekS View Post
i just wanna see mila kunis go at it with natalie portman...just proof that prayers are answered....right now im just waiting for miranda kerr to walk by my office naked doing the backwards crabwalk.

Sigged.
post #35 of 171
Saw it last night and I want my two hours back.

One of the worst.
post #36 of 171
Quote:
Originally Posted by Arrogant Bastard View Post
I have heard there is no nudity in the lez-boat scenes. If this is true, I have no further interest in the film.

+1
post #37 of 171
Have not seen this yet but thought this comparison between it and Showgirls was interesting.
http://nymag.com/daily/entertainment...slideshow.html

I really want to see Black Swan but am just as excited to finally see a trailer for The Tree of Life.
post #38 of 171
Quote:
Originally Posted by patrickBOOTH View Post
Saw Black Swan last night. It was good as far as modern movies go. A few over the top parts, and parts that just show off effects. A lot of Aronofsky sexuality. I am sure a lot of people who have not seen really good movies will rave.

What other American movie in current release would you qualify as a "good movie"?
post #39 of 171
I am pretty sure Natalie Portman got paid $20k every time someone grabbed, fondled, or caressed her junk in this movie. That being said - I think this may be one of Aronofsky's best movies.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Guitar Preacher View Post
just as excited to finally see a trailer for The Tree of Life.
Was good.
Quote:
Originally Posted by A Y View Post
I haven't seen it yet, but plan to despite what I said. I just wish he didn't feel the need to play up the popular stereotypes of ballet to make his movie.
Maybe I'm unaware of the popular stereotypes of ballet. I didn't really notice anything egregious. The wrestler was really bad at this though, maybe I'm just either more ignorant of the stereotypes or they aren't really that important. I will say though that pretty much all of these girls need a fucking sandwich. I don't think that's an untrue stereotype though.
post #40 of 171
Thread Starter 
Quote:
Originally Posted by Tokyo Slim View Post
I will say though that pretty much all of these girls need a fucking sandwich. I don't think that's an untrue stereotype though.
Funny you should mention. Natalie Portman & Mila Kunis Confess: We Pigged Out After Ballerina Film Wrapped
post #41 of 171
Quote:
Originally Posted by poorsod View Post
JFC, Panda Express?!?! At the AIRPORT? Bitch must have been desperate. That shit isn't even food.
post #42 of 171
Quote:
Originally Posted by Tokyo Slim View Post
I will say though that pretty much all of these girls need a fucking sandwich. I don't think that's an untrue stereotype though.

Yes, they are mostly very skinny, but no more so than dedicated athletes who need to worry about their weight that are working at the top of their game. Their diet is not very different than some of the cutting bro diets you find in the health forum: high protein, low carbs, low fat. And some do have eating disorders, but they're not all psychotic, passive women trapped in a girl's body like this movie and the various interviews would have you believe.

There are plenty of real vices that Aronofsky could have shown if he wanted to, but I guess he chose what would make his movie his movie. I hope people don't think this movie reflects the ballet world accurately.

The article posted by poorsod also has more silly comments by Portman and Kunis. They do live like monks, but this is no different than other kinds of elite athletes who have to dedicate their lives to their sport in order to achieve the kind of performance they do. And they do like to go out, party, and eat good food --- not that different than regular people really.

If I had to guess, Portman and Kunis had an especially difficult time preparing for this movie, because they had to compress into 1 year what most trained dancers do over 10-15 years, and they're projecting their experience to the whole dance world.

--Andre
post #43 of 171
Quote:
Originally Posted by A Y View Post
The reception to it from the ballet world has been both hot and cool.
--Andre

There's a ballet world? Do they have space ships and stuff? They're all homos there, right?
post #44 of 171
Quote:
Originally Posted by A Y View Post
but they're not all psychotic, passive women trapped in a girl's body like this movie and the various interviews would have you believe.
Is that what you got from the movie? Cause that's not how I'd characterize it.
Quote:
There are plenty of real vices that Aronofsky could have shown if he wanted to, but I guess he chose what would make his movie his movie. I hope people don't think this movie reflects the ballet world accurately.
This is what I don't get. This seems like a particularly empty criticism. The vices that he chose to show were the result of one character's psychotic obsession with perfection. This wasn't portrayed as systemic or common. In fact quite the opposite. So what exactly is the complaint? That the movie wasn't a documentary?
Quote:
If I had to guess, Portman and Kunis had an especially difficult time preparing for this movie, because they had to compress into 1 year what most trained dancers do over 10-15 years, and they're projecting their experience to the whole dance world. --Andre
What?
post #45 of 171
Quote:
Originally Posted by Tokyo Slim View Post
What?

FTA:

Quote:
"We were probably doing eight hours a day," Portman said, "and the physical discipline of it really helped for the emotional side of the character because you get the sense of the sort of monastic lifestyle of only working out that is a ballet dancer's life. You don't drink. You don't go out with your friends. You don't have much food. You are constantly putting your body through extreme pain and you really get that understanding of the self-flagellation of a ballet dancer."

The pain and struggle is mostly true, but the rest of it, including the self-flagellation, is false. The complaint is that the movie is a caricature of the ballet world, but that wouldn't be a new complaint for most movies on most subjects.

--Andre
New Posts  All Forums:Forum Nav:
  Return Home
  Back to Forum: Entertainment and Culture
Styleforum › Forums › General › Entertainment and Culture › Black Swan