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The Company
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The Company (2003) More at IMDbPro »

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The Company (2003) -- Hv post
The Company (2003) -- Ensemble drama centered around a group of ballet dancers, with a focus on one young dancer (Campbell) who's poised to become a principal performer.
The Company (2003) -- MattTrailer.com - Trailer (Flash)

Overview

User Rating:
6.2/10   3,482 votes
MOVIEmeter: ?
Up 1% in popularity this week. See why on IMDbPro.
Director:
Writers (WGA):
Neve Campbell (story) &
Barbara Turner (story) ...
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Contact:
View company contact information for The Company on IMDbPro.
Release Date:
5 February 2004 (Netherlands) more
Genre:
Plot:
Ensemble drama centered around a group of ballet dancers, with a focus on one young dancer (Campbell) who's poised to become a principal performer. full summary | add synopsis
Plot Keywords:
Awards:
2 nominations more
NewsDesk:
(12 articles)
Decade in Review: 2003 Top Ten
 (From FilmExperience. 8 December 2009, 6:30 AM, PST)

The Girlfriend Experience
 (From Pure Movies. 27 November 2009, 9:12 AM, PST)

User Reviews:
So Everything's Not So Beautiful at the Ballet After All more (118 total)

Cast

  (Cast overview, first billed only)

Neve Campbell ... Loretta 'Ry' Ryan

Malcolm McDowell ... Alberto Antonelli

James Franco ... Josh
Barbara E. Robertson ... Harriet (as Barbara Robertson)

William Dick ... Edouard
Susie Cusack ... Susie
Marilyn Dodds Frank ... Mrs. Ryan
John Lordan ... Mr. Ryan
Mariann Mayberry ... Stepmother

Roderick Peeples ... Stepfather
Yasen Peyankov ... Justin's Mentor
Davis C. Robertson ... Alec - Joffrey Dancer (as Davis Robertson)
Deborah Dawn ... Deborah - Joffrey Dancer
John Gluckman ... John - Joffrey Dancer
David Gombert ... Justin - Joffrey Dancer
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Create a character page for: ?

Additional Details

Also Known As:
The Company - Das Ensemble (Germany)
Company (France) [fr]
De Corpo E Alma (Brazil) [pt]
Kumpanya (Turkey: Turkish title) [tr]
O horos tou pathous (Greece) (TV title) [el]
The Company (Spain) [es]
The Company (Denmark) [da]
more
MPAA:
Rated PG-13 on appeal for brief strong language, some nudity and sexual content.
Runtime:
Canada:112 min (Toronto International Film Festival) | USA:112 min | Argentina:112 min
Country:
Language:
Color:
Aspect Ratio:
2.35 : 1 more
Sound Mix:
DTS | Dolby Digital | SDDS (8 channels)
Certification:
Iceland:L | France:U | Portugal:M/12 | Australia:PG | Brazil:12 | Germany:o.Al. | Netherlands:AL | Singapore:NC-16 | Switzerland:7 (canton of Geneva) | Switzerland:7 (canton of Vaud) | UK:12A | USA:PG-13 (re-rating on appeal) | Argentina:Atp | USA:R (original rating) (certificate #39884) | Canada:PG (Ontario)
Filming Locations:

Fun Stuff

Trivia:
Robert Altman shot 10 ballets in full specially for the film. more
Goofs:
Continuity: At about 1h 45m into the film, during the curtain call, those dancers were standing at different positions from different angles. Watch for the two men who were wearing blue and red bodysuits, they were standing at different places. more
Quotes:
Alberto Antonelli: Thinking about the motion isn't being the motion. more
Movie Connections:
Referenced in O Lucky Malcolm! (2006) more
Soundtrack:
White Widow more

FAQ

This FAQ is empty. Add the first question.
16 out of 19 people found the following review useful.
So Everything's Not So Beautiful at the Ballet After All, 18 January 2004
Author: noralee from Queens, NY

"The Company" is a lovely commercial for the Joffrey Ballet of Chicago (for New Yorkers this is in fact the same modern ballet company that used to be based at City Center but left the competitive dance fund raising environment here to have the stage to itself in Chicago).

A labor of love for producer/story writer/star/former dancer Neve Campbell, she was determined to make the first film about a whole company, not just using the dance world for a backdrop of individual melodrama, and with long passages of actual performances. So she brought in the primo director of ensembles, Robert Altman. But clearly she made compromises to get the film made that put his creativity as a director in a straight jacket and only lets his trademark talents fleetingly shine through.

The key was getting the Joffrey's cooperation and I can only imagine the tough negotiations that resulted in this pretty much being a whitewash of the ballet world, or of any creative endeavor, in sharp contrast to the behind-the-scenes reality shows "Project Greenlight" on HBO or "The Fire Within" about Cirque du Soleil's "Varekai" that was on Bravo. I surmise a long list of thou shalt not's that appear to include items such as:

-- no views of the non-artistic administrators, board, or fund raisers (there's a passing exhortation to a flashy choreographer Robet Desrosiers to stay within the budget, but he gets the complicated costumes and sets he wants anyway);

-- no homosexual relationships (there's a passing reference to the dancers AIDS has taken including "Bob", which cognoscenti have to know refers to the company's founder Robert Jeffrey, and Malcolm McDowall as the egotistical artistic director "Alberto Antonelli," a stand-in presumably for current company director Gerald Arpino, urges fellow Italian-American men not to make their boys, like he had to, "hide their ballet shoes");

-- no eating disorders (we do twice hear "Mr. A," half-jokingly, urge the company to eat salads and vegetables and there's one fast, quiet exchange in passing that I think was about diet pills);

-- blame dancers' problems on dysfunctional parents and mentors, recalling that vivid song from "A Chorus Line" - "Everything was beautiful at the ballet" as dancers seek to escape messy situations through temporary perfect beauty.

Altman does get to assert his artistic priorities in a few ways. He effectively seizes on the ageism in dance, showing that it's not just the tyranny of aging bodies, as would affect any athlete, but that dancers with experience speak up for themselves and are more difficult to control in a viciously autocratic environment than ambitious, financially desperate, and, literally, pliable young dancers.

It's also the first time I've seen a camera expose the swarm of acolyte assistants to the director, revealing them as ex-dancers whom "Mr. A" still dismissively calls "babies" and who resent the new stars even as they dance vicariously through them.

The other beautiful Altman touch is when the significant character developments take place not center stage in a crowd but through a look or line happening way in the corner of the screen, like the expression on James Franco, as Cambell's chef beau, when she avoids introducing him to her family amidst a rush of congratulators.

But visually and musically the Joffrey is a wonderful choice, as the choreographers represented range from Arpino to Alwin Nikolais to Laura Dean and MOMIX. A centerpiece danced by Campbell is a sexy Lar Lubovitch pas de deux to the signature song "My Funny Valentine" which is used as a leitmotif, for reasons that still seem murky to me after hearing Altman explain why on "Charlie Rose," throughout the film in versions also by Elvis Costello, Chet Baker, and the Kronos Quartet. The music ranges from classical to jazz to the ethereal pop of Julee Cruise, Mark O'Connor's in-between "Appalachia Waltz", and the lovely score by Van Dyke Parks.

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Favourite Dance Sequence? QueenKay
This is not a movie, but just a showcase of dance pieces... STLFilmmaker
Quite possibly........... ... DepecheArsenal
What do retired dancers do? shaabenanizer
Help me...did I miss something? haylies
Noel's Swinging Ballet Music happyintrovert
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