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    The Arthropolgist

    Dance fever: Cinema Arts Festival plans showing of Wim Wenders' 3D movie about Pina Bausch

    Nancy Wozny
    nancy wozny
    Sep 27, 2011 | 11:30 am
    News_Nancy_Pina_Damiano Ottavio Bigi and Clémentine Deluy in Wim Wenders’ PINA
    Damiano Ottavio Bigi and Clementine Deluy in Wim Wenders' Pina
    Photo by Donata Wenders ©Neue Road Movies GmbH. A Sundance Selects release

    Walking down a dark street on a balmy Austin October night, a truck driver stopped to ask me if he knew where he was supposed to pick up some redwood trees. Normally, I would think that was an odd request, but still under the deep spell of Pina Bausch's Nur Du (Only You), I replied calmly, "Right here."

    Redwood trees, mountains of carnations, a pile of dirt or a carpet of velvet green turf, Bausch's theatrically charged dances spilled out on otherworldly surfaces during the course of her unparalleled career. This November, Bausch's dances will be projected in 3D in Wim Wender's extraordinary tribute to the seminal German choreographer, Pina, one of the many arts-focused films headlining the 2011 Cinema Arts Festival, that runs Nov. 9-13 in Houston.

    Pina is also part of the Festival's international thrust, which includes films by Patricio Guzman (Chile), Zhu Wen (China) and Mahmoud Kaabour (Lebanon).

    There hasn't been this much excitement in the dance film world since Natalie Portman flapped her bloody feathered wings in Black Swan, screened at last year's Cinema Arts Festival. In fact, Festival curator Richard Herskowitz has quite a track record for including significant dance films; in 2010, Frederick Wiseman's, La Danse: The Paris Opera Ballet, proved a Festival favorite.

    There hasn't been this much excitement in the dance film world since Natalie Portman flapped her bloody feathered wings in Black Swan, screened at last year's Festival. In fact, curator Richard Herskowitz has quite a track record for including significant dance films.

    The year was 1996 when Tanztheater Wuppertal performed Nur Du at University of Texas as part of a larger project examining Bausch's work and contribution to dance theater history. I had the extraordinary privilege, courtesy of the Goethe Institute and UT, to spend two weeks in Austin, taking daily class with the veteran Tanztheater dancer Lutz Förster, and attending lectures on the development of dance theater. Förster not only taught us a section from Bausch's 1980, my favorite piece of hers, but even shared some of Bausch's psychologically rigorous creative process. Dancers coming of age during the 1980s straddled the post-modern aesthetic and the emotionally brutal edge of Bausch's brand of depth truth telling.

    Although she had a distinct dance signature, Bausch embodied a fusion of influences. She studied with German modern dance pioneer Kurt Jooss at the Folkwang School in Essen. She also spent a year at Juilliard School, where her teachers included Antony Tudor, José Limón, Alfredo Corvino and Margret Craske. As a dancer, she worked with Paul Taylor, Paul Sanasardo and Donya Feuer. After she returned to Germany in the late 1960s, she eventually took over Wuppertal Ballet (renamed Tanztheater Wuppertal) in 1973.

    Born in 1940, Bausch lived through war, violence, epic changes in Europe, all of which played out in her work. Yet, it's the personal nature of the dancers' interactions that she is most remembered for. Whatever story unfolded in front of us, it was danced by real people, who delved deeply into their own lives to make something authentic happen on stage. Through athletic movement, a keen eye for set design elements, an uncanny musicality and shreds of a fractured narrative, Bausch let us in on a pre-verbal and unconscious layer of expression. Her name and the work she created while directing Tanztheater Wuppertal defined the dance/theater genre from 1970s until her sudden death on June 30, 2009, just five days after being diagnosed with cancer.

    When I first heard that a Bausch film was in the works, I was excited. When I found out that it would be directed by Wenders, I was ecstatic. When I learned that Pina would be coming to Houston, well, simply starry eyed. The legendary director of Paris, Texas, The Buena Vista Social Club and numerous other films, seemed a perfect fit for the choreographer's enigmatic world. (Wender's wistful Wings of Desire, selected by SWAMP's Mary Lampe as part of MFAH's Movies Houstonians Love, screens on Nov. 7.)

    I'm not surprised that Wender's film is 3D because Bausch's work operated on numerous dimensions, drawing from dreams, personal memory and psychological investigations of human behavior. The 3D medium may be the best way to capture her raw physicality. It was Wenders' use of the 3D technology that originally drew Herskowitz to the film.

    "His use of 3D is innovative and appropriate. The viewer is drawn into her dances." says Herskowitz. "I've admired Wenders' work for a long time, yet it's interesting to note that his arts documentaries are among his finest works. Buena Vista Social Club was a knock out. It makes sense to include a favorite director working at full tilt."

    Herskowitz is also a Bausch fan. "I saw many of her pieces at Brooklyn Academy of Music (BAM), and have always revered her work," he adds.

    Pina includes excerpts of such ground breaking works as Cafe Muller, Le Sacre du Printemps, Vollmond and Kontakthof, along with archival footage of the choreographer at work and short solo performances by her one-of-a-kind dancers. Wenders enlisted Bausch's methodology of using questions to drive the action. The solo sections, filmed in and around Wuppertal, derive from Wenders' inquiry into the dancers' memories.

    For years, I thought nothing of driving four hours to see her work at BAM. I'll never forget sneezing through 1980, which sprawled out on a bed of real green grass. The film's tag line "dance, dance, otherwise we are lost" cuts to the core of Bausch's transcendent work. We lost a dance giant when Bausch died. One can only imagine the dances she never got to create.

    Wenders' film draws us back into Bausch's visceral terrain, honoring her legacy in the process, and letting us take one last spin on the lawn.

    Get in a Tanztheater Wuppertal trance with the Trailer for Wim Wender's Pina

    Behind the scenes of Wim Wenders' Pina

    Fabian Prioville and Azusa Seyama in Wim Wenders' Pina

    News_Nancy_Pina_Fabian Prioville and Azusa Seyama in Wim Wenders\u2019 PINA
    Photo by Donata Wenders ©Neue Road Movies GmbH. A Sundance Selects release
    Fabian Prioville and Azusa Seyama in Wim Wenders' Pina
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    Movie Review

    Avatar: Fire and Ash returns to Pandora with big action and bold visuals

    Alex Bentley
    Dec 18, 2025 | 5:00 pm
    Oona Chaplin in Avatar: Fire and Ash
    Photo courtesy of 20th Century Studios
    Oona Chaplin in Avatar: Fire and Ash.

    For a series whose first two films made over $5 billion combined worldwide, Avatar has a curious lack of widespread cultural impact. The films seem to exist in a sort of vacuum, popping up for their run in theaters and then almost as quickly disappearing from the larger movie landscape. The third of five planned movies, Avatar: Fire and Ash, is finally being released three years after its predecessor, Avatar: The Way of Water.

    The new film finds the main duo, human-turned-Na’vi Jake Sully (Sam Worthington) and his native Na’vi wife, Neytiri (Zoë Saldaña), still living with the water-loving Metkayina clan led by Ronal (Kate Winslet) and Tonowari (Cliff Curtis). While Jake and Neytiri still play a big part, the focus shifts significantly to their two surviving children, Lo’ak (Britain Dalton) and Tuk (Trinity Jo-Li Bliss), as well as two they’ve essentially adopted, Kiri (Sigourney Weaver) and Spider (Jack Champion).

    Miles Quaritch (Stephen Lang), who lives on in a fabricated Na’vi body, is still looking for revenge on Jake, and he finds help in the form of the Mangkwan Clan (aka the Ash People), led by Varang (Oona Chaplin). Quaritch’s access to human weapons and the Mangkwan’s desire for more power on the moon known as Pandora make them a nice match, and they team up to try to dominate the other tribes.

    Aside from the story, the main point of making the films for writer/director James Cameron is showing off his considerable technical filmmaking prowess, and that is on full display right from the start. The characters zoom around both the air and sea on various creatures with which they’ve bonded, providing Cameron and his team with plenty of opportunities to put the audience right there with them. Cameron’s preferred viewing method of 3D makes the experience even more immersive, even if the high frame rate he uses makes some scenes look too realistic for their own good.

    The story, as it has been in the first two films, is a mixed bag. Cameron and co-writers Rick Jaffa and Amanda Silver start off well, having Jake, Neytiri, and their kids continue mourning the death of Neteyam (Jamie Flatters) in the previous film. The struggle for power provides an interesting setup, but Cameron and his team seem to drag out the conflict for much too long. This is the longest Avatar film yet, and you really start to feel it in the back half as the filmmakers add on a bunch of unnecessary elements.

    Worse than the elongated story, though, is the hackneyed dialogue that Cameron, Jaffa, and Silver have come up with. Almost every main character is forced to spout lines that diminish the importance of the events around them. The writers seemingly couldn’t resist trying to throw in jokes despite them clashing with the tone of the scenes in which they’re said. Combined with the somewhat goofy nature of the Na’vi themselves (not to mention talking whales), the eye-rolling words detract from any excitement or emotion the story builds up.

    A pre-movie behind-the-scenes short film shows how the actors act out every scene in performance capture suits, lending an authenticity to their performances. Still, some performers are better than others, with Saldaña, Worthington, and Lang standing out. It’s more than a little weird having Weaver play a 14-year-old girl, but it works relatively well. Those who actually get to show their real faces are collectively fine, but none of them elevate the film overall.

    There are undoubtedly some Avatar superfans for which Fire and Ash will move the larger story forward in significant ways. For anyone else, though, the film is a demonstration of both the good and bad sides of Cameron. As he’s proven for 40 years, his visuals are (almost) beyond reproach, but the lack of a story that sticks with you long after you’ve left the theater keeps the film from being truly memorable.

    ---

    Avatar: Fire and Ash opens in theaters on December 19.

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