The Diaries of Vaslav Nijinsky Movie Review
The Diaries of Vaslav Nijinsky Review

"The Diaries of Vaslav Nijinsky" Overview

Rating: NR
2002
Cast and Crew
Director : Paul CoxProducer : Paul Cox,Aanya Whitehead
Screenwiter : Vaslav Nijinsky,Paul Cox
Starring : Derek Jacobi,Delia Silvan,Chris Haywood,Hans Sonneveld,Oliver Streeton,Jillian Smith,Kevin Lucas,David Gallasch,Aanya Whitehead,Gabriella Joy Smart,Lisa Heaven,Patricia Cellier,Kyra Cox,Anandine Merino
In 1916, acclaimed Russian ballet dancer Vaslav Nijinsky had a mental
breakdown, which he recorded in a series of four notebooks over a seven-week
period. Director Paul Cox uses excerpts from these journals as a basis for The
Diaries of Vaslav Nijinsky (also known as just Nijinsky), a film that explores
the dancer's descent into madness using images seen from Nijinsky's viewpoint.
The film deals, in part, with the beauty and tragedy of decay. It is quite
terrible.
Viewers suffer through a 92-minute montage of clichéd images -- fields of
wheat, diaphanous skirts, birds in flight -- as narrator Derek Jacobi reads
from Nijinsky's diaries. As one might imagine, insane ramblings make for poor
monologue. Evidence such insight as: "I am feeling in the flesh, and not
intellect in the flesh… Beauty cannot be discussed; beauty cannot be
criticized. I love beauty because I feel it." After an hour or so, you'll want
to scratch at your own skin for diversion.
The documentary, and I use the term with skepticism, is an art piece. As such
it is not intended as narrative. But in fact, you'll learn more from the
one-paragraph epilogue flashed on the screen in the last 20 seconds than you
will from the rest of the film. There are many layers of symbolism -- bird
imagery, religious iconography, blood, and so on -- that the viewer will not be
inspired to untangle. Perhaps there's something there, but somehow one tends to
doubt it.
There are a few lovely scenes in which dancers re-create bits of Nijinky's
choreographic work, but these are far overwhelmed by the chloroformic shots of
bubbling streams and light streaming through tree branches that comprise the
rest of the movie. Jacobi's narration is apt, and his considerable talent lends
tragedy to lines that would otherwise seem comic. Still, the film would work
much better as a video installation in a museum, where viewers would be free to
leave. Immediately.
Feelin' blue.
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Review by Margaret Berry
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