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BLACK
SWAN
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At home, Nina is preserved like a China doll, a young woman perpetually in a state of ignorance and juvenile devices that keep her closed off from the world at the clutches of an overbearing mother (Barbara Hershey is delightfully despicable) who both idealizes but loathes her. She's a figure of hope in Nina's life, but also an obstacle portraying the ballerina in her truest essence always striving to help her but also secretly praying for her downfall. All the while Nina attempts to live up to her expectations and is kept in her very own music box plastered with childhood relics and seeds of regret and torment. Deep down though Nina is a person of incomplete nature, one whose yet to fully embrace her humanity in attempts to become a fictitious ray of sunshine in everyone's life, and as the pressure of her upcoming role in a revival of Swan Lake dawns upon her, soon her plunge in to madness follows. Aronofsky employ both astounding sight and disquieting sound as a form of telling this tale implementing the musical score and the play of dark and light to envision the battle in Nina's soul to either embrace or reject this lingering evil. The personal turmoil is made even worse when Nina is introduced to Lilly, an unkempt and confident young dancer who embodies the perfection within the imperfections, and threatens to cast out Nina once she becomes convinced Lilly could at any moment occupy her chance for worship and greatness. Lilly (as played by the gorgeous Mila Kunis) is a fascinating character, one who is without shame and embraces her own unusual sense of style and habit, indulging in sin at every turn and beckoning Nina to do the same for reasons left ambiguous until the very end. Natalie Portman is superb as the delicate Nina, a girl who could break and shatter at any moment like a fine piece of glass, dueling with her own inner most desires and lust and hoping to conquer whatever demons that may linger in her own reflections. Always tinkering with our views on reality and sexuality, Aronofsky keeps Nina in a world in between our own and hers and turns the screw at every such occasion to convey a marvelous descent in to sheer absolute insanity that offers up one final bow that will undoubtedly take your breath away after the credits have rolled.
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