The Company Movie Review
The Company Review

"The Company" Overview

Rating: PG-13
2003
Cast and Crew
Director : Robert AltmanProducer : Robert Altman,Joshua Astrachan,Neve Campbell,Pamela Koffler,Christine Vachon,David Levy
Screenwiter : Barbara Turner
Starring : Neve Campbell,Malcolm McDowell,James Franco,Barbara Robertson,William Dick,Susie Cusack,Marilyn Dodds Frank,John Lordan,Mariann Mayberry,Roderick Peeples,Yasen Peyankov
Thank you, Robert Altman. Coming fast on the heels of one of the worst
moviegoing years of recent memory, The Company appears like a wondrous beacon
of light. (It even trumps Altman protégé Alan Rudolph’s clear-eyed ode to
middle class challenges, The Secret Lives of Dentists.) Altman casts his gaze
upon the Joffrey Ballet of Chicago: their days and nights, their strict regime
and straight-ahead pursuit of artistic expression, and the grueling physical
toll of stretching their bodies to the limit. Opening with a modern dance
number with performers in skin-tight costumes racing across the stage with
multi-colored banners, The Company is like a direct appeal to the heart and
mind, to which I can only exclaim, “Wonderful!” and “Beautiful!” It’s a
reminder of what cinema can do, and the poetry of the dancer’s movements is
corresponded to with Altman’s visual panache, his use of vivid colors, his
vividly imaginative framing.
It shames flashy movies like The Matrix sequels, which adopt surface style and
frenetic movement but lack sheer, sumptuous vision. Altman’s movie isn’t just a
pretty sheen (“I hate pretty!” snaps Malcolm McDowell as the head of the ballet
company), it’s a full audio-visual experience. For all the limbs blown apart in
Matrix Revolutions it’s got nothing on the Company dancers bandaging their
bruised heels and toes, or the horrifying moment when a tendon snaps during a
rehearsal. It’s something we can respond to, relate to. It’s emotion pictures,
corresponding to the vibrant, emotive images of the dance.
Though the narrative seems tenuous, The Company is a well-observed and enticing
portrait of artists at work and at play. It’s punctuated by elaborate dance
sequences (Altman shows a dancer performing on and around a swing, cutting to
images of her feet gliding inches above the floor—a moment among many of
transcendence and grace); moved along by rehearsals and the occasional push
from McDowell’s benevolent tyrant shaking off preconceptions, guiding toward
the organic and spontaneous within the tight parameters of dance.
The show that’s detailed from start to finish in The Company is an elaborate
feat called “Blue Snake,” which pushes the dance sequences into (intentional)
stylistic excess. Grotesque? Perhaps. But it’s an ironic counterpoint to all
the sensual pieces that came before, and to his credit Altman takes the frankly
overcooked production seriously. He doesn’t mock the creators; in fact he
embraces them and applauds them. (The closing credits are seen over images of
the company dancers taking their bows.) Though I wouldn’t argue The Company is
a metaphor for Altman’s own process, his identification with his fellow
craftsmen is palpable, direct, and warts ‘n’ all honest.
Co-producer Neve Campbell has one of the more substantial roles as Ry, a
peripheral dancer who is allowed to cross over into center stage during a few
key points in The Company. It’s a performance free of vanity, with Campbell
literally giving herself over to the ensemble. Ry frequently blends in with her
colleagues (mostly actual ballet dancers from the Joffrey company), and is
identifiable more as the woman dating another artist (James Franco, not playing
a dancer but a master chef). The concept of dancing, or performance, extends
into Franco’s dexterous cooking -- or during the game of pool where Campbell
winsomely looks across the barroom at her future boyfriend sipping a beer,
silently admiring her. Words are fleeting, movement and moments seem more
palpable and identifiable. The morning after their first night together, spent
making breakfast, is mostly played silent.
The Company is one of the more erotic movies of the year, not because of the
occasional backstage nudity as dancers change but because of the palpable heat
generated by the actors and their physicality. It feels intimate even within
the public forum of a staged performance. Altman frequently shoots in long
takes, with wide angles showing the full length of the human form. Occasional
close-ups show details of hands or feet, or the shuffling of the craftsmen
backstage; tracking shots from the audience capture the vibrancy of their
enthusiasm. When Campbell is given her first big shot dancing during a wind and
rainstorm, leaves scattering across the stage, even Mother Nature swoons.
The Company has all that and more, finding space for an elegy to AIDS,
deflation of cultural machismo, a nod to the experienced old in contrast to the
impetuous young, safe sex (in an amusing throwaway moment that Altman doesn’t
throw away), and of harsh and dear life lessons. Altman sometimes claims that
he ends his movie with a death (McCabe & Mrs. Miller; Brewster McCloud) because
otherwise the film, like a life, would simply go on forever. The Company finds
an artful way of handling a death of another kind, and through a few sensitive
words and a gesture of romantic bravado suggests the beginning of something
new. In a movie that’s sexually charged and humane in its intention, what
better place to end than the origin of love?
No goofing off on company time.
Reviewer: Jeremiah Kipp





