You’re telling me the world’s greatest ballet dancer (Mikhail Baryshnikov) and world’s greatest tap dancer (Gregory Hines) star together in a movie all about dancing? And it’s also a political thriller? Cool. I mean kinda weird but cool.
Baryshnikov essentially plays himself as Nikolai Rodchenko,
a famous ballet dancer who escaped the oppressive Soviet Union and defected to
the US. Years later he’s a thriving mega
star who travels all over performing in the world’s most prestigious
theaters. On the way to his next show
his plane has a malfunction and they must make an emergency landing in
Siberia. When Nikolai gets wind of this
he freaks out, frantically tears up his passport and tries to flush it down the
toilet. The jumbo jet spectacularly
crash lands on a remote military base where the passengers are held until they
can be transported out of the country.
Unfortunately Nikolai is found out almost immediately and the KGB whisk
him away. They try to persuade him to
remain in the country and dance for them again.
Of course he doesn’t exactly have a choice. Dance or die.
Meanwhile American defector Raymond Greenwood (Hines) is
eking it out in Siberia putting on a miniature production of Porgy and
Bess. He despised the way he was treated
as a black man in America who showed great talent but was ignored. He joined the military where he was ordered
to carry out commands he didn’t agree with like kill people. Through his experiences he developed an
intense hatred towards the US and split.
Initially he was treated well when he arrived in the Soviet Union but
once the novelty wore off and he became old news as a political football they
shipped him out of Moscow to the middle of nowhere. While this new lifestyle isn’t as wonderful
as he’d hoped he seems to be ok with his decision overall.
Raymond is tapped (get it?) by the KGB to convince Nikolai
that the ol’ SU ain’t so bad and he can have his old life back and shoot
straight to being their top ballet dancer again. They even bring in his former dance partner
and lover Galina (Helen Mirren (Fast X)) as additional muscle to get him
on board. Nikolai isn’t buying this shit
though and keeps his head low until he can figure out a way to escape to the
American embassy.
While the thriller portion of the film is fairly by the
numbers (although I have a real soft spot for this particular sub-genre,
especially since they don’t make them anymore) what shines the most are the
dancing scenes. Big surprise,
right? Interestingly they keep
Baryshnikov and Hines separate in their dancing until the end when they do a
duet. This is smart for several
reasons. One is that their disciplines
are completely different, which Raymond points out to the KGB (who don’t
care). One comes from the ballet world,
one comes from the tap world. Nikolai
and Raymond spend a lot of time together in and out of the practice room so
they study each other, get to know each other, learn from each other. Another reason is to show the metaphorical
rift between the characters. They
dislike one another initially but gain respect for the other’s abilities and
sympathize with their situations. It’s
beautiful.
The way they weave the dancing into the story is impressive
too. For example Nikolai has his boombox
and western cassette tapes with him because they were on the plane so he uses
that music to workout to. Raymond hasn’t
heard any new music, American or otherwise, in a long time so it strikes a deep
chord. When Nikolai goes out of sight to
take a shower Raymond puts on a tape and improvises a huge tap routine running
all around the dance studio, jumping, spinning, tapping like he’s never tapped
before. This fresh music with infectious
beats and sounds unleashes a fire in him that’s been dormant. It plants a seed in his brain that maybe
Nikolai’s right. Maybe the Soviet Union
kinda sucks and he should help him get the fuck out of there.
And it goes without saying (but I’m gonna say it anyway, er,
write it anyway) the duet is pretty magical.
These fuckers strut their shit all over the place in a side by side
formation. It looks so natural how they
combine ballet and tap maneuvers into one fluid sequence. The martial arts kicks are such an awesome
and funny touch too (foreshadowed by Hines doing some flying kicks earlier in
the film). I mean these guys look like
they’re having a good time pulling off moves that neither of them would ever do
on their own and there doesn’t appear to be too much watering down or
capitulation either. They strike the
right balance of styles. Plus
Baryshnikov and Hines look badass as hell with Baryshnikov sporting a quasi
greaser look in his black pants, black boots, black jacket and white t-shirt
while Hines wears relaxed slacks and a tucked in button down shirt with the
sleeves rolled up.
One last thing I gotta mention is the dance scenes are shot
superbly, especially the opening ballet number.
The camera keeps the full body in frame most of the time so we don’t
miss the unbelievable foot work. Cuts,
closeups, pans and spins are all used to maximum effect. It’s impressive how dynamic the camera work
is without feeling too flashy or distracting.
I wanna say it’s a little strange that the rest of the picture doesn’t
have nearly this same level of deftness but that could’ve been an intentional
choice. The plain shooting of the
non-dancing stuff certainly provides a contrast. So like the characters themselves who become
alive when they begin to dance so does the camera. I’ll leave it up to you to decide.
Director Taylor Hackford turned in an intriguing film that’s
sorta half amazing and half just ok.
I’ve said this before that he doesn’t really have a discernible style
but he tends to turn in solid films with neat premises: The Devil’s Advocate, Delores Claiborne, Ray, Blood In, Blood Out, Chuck Berry: Hail! Hail!
Rock ‘n’ Roll. I need to give the
guy more credit.
So ballet and tap dancing can be friends after all. It only took being trapped together in an
isolated bitter communist country with little artistic freedom, no real means
of escape and the threat of prison or death if you don’t conform. It was worth it.
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