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The Company (2003)
Runtime: 4 hrs 46 mins
Genre: Dramas
Starring: Neve Campbell, Malcolm McDowell, James Franco
Screenwriter: Barbara Turner
Story: Neve Campbell, Barbara Turner
Producer: Christine Vachon, Pamela Koffler, Robert Altman, Neve Campbell
Composer: Van Dyke Parks
DVD Info
Release:
Jan 6, 2004
DVD Features:
- Region 1
- Keep Case
- Anamorphic Widescreen
Audio:
- Dolby Digital 5.1 - English
- Subtitles - French
- Closed Captioning
Additional Release Material:
- Audio Commentary - 1. Robert Altman - Director, Neve Campbell - Star
- Featurettes - 1. Making Of
- 2. THE PASSION OF DANCE
- 3. Play All Dance Sequences
- Additional Footage - 1. Extended Dance Sequences
- Bonus Trailers
Reviews
Meanders aimlessly until eventually falling flat on its face.
Almost imperceptibly subtle, but like ballet itself it's a remarkable experience if you let it wash over you.
Eschews any concern with the cinematic foreground in favor of wide-angled pans across an expanded back cast encouraged to indulge in Altman's trademark overlapping dialogue.
[Altman's] trademarks -- invisible editing, doped-up zooms, overlapping conversations -- are all on display, but those looking for any sense of momentum will be disappointed.
...can be read as a movie about movie-making, about how casts are assembled and tricked...into yielding something more profound than they might have thought themselves capable
[Altman] fondly documents the ins and outs of this notoriously exotic gang of artists as if he were an amateur anthropologist smitten by an eccentric tribe.
My feeling is that The Company is meant to be enjoyed just as we would enjoy the dance it chronicles. It's a miscalculation, but not a grave offense.
By the time Campbell and her partner pair off for … "My Funny Valentine," the film has become a love letter to the expanding the limits of artistic expression
To call this movie dramatically inert is to oversell it. This is one of the few non-experimental films that is virtually without plot.
The real star of this movie is dance, and [director Robert] Altman -- with cinematographer Andrew Dunne -- has captured some of the finest footage I have seen.
The extended dance scenes don't match the experience of watching ballet live but The Company succeeds in conveying the fluid grace, the beauty that's possible in dance.
A game try, and it's good to see Altman still at it, and still making his films his own way. But for me, at least, this one is a misfire.
Altman ... whose intuition for placing the camera in just the right spot has always been impressive. In the dance scenes, it's flawless.
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