We would have to add “The Company” to that list, as well, I think. “Center Stage” is no masterpiece, but it’s also a ballet-centered film. There's also "Nijinsky" with George de la Pena and Leslie Browne, and the curio "Spectre of the Rose."
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Its use of color cinematography - those blues and reds! - trumped Turning Point's drab color palette; its use of a short ballet in its entirety to illustrate the movie's larger story also trumped the bits of classical ballet thrown at us in Turning Point, used entirely as window dressing.
Well, “The Red Shoes” had a director of distinction, Michael Powell (with an assist from his Archers partner Emeric Pressburger) and a great cinematographer in Jack Cardiff. Herbert Ross was a very good journeyman director but not someone with a lot of visual imagination. I think some of the excerpts in The Turning Point were well chosen, although the movie as a whole was a disappointment, especially considering the people involved (Ross, Nora Kaye, Arthur Laurents, all talented people with a real grasp of the subject matter).
“ The Red Shoes” ballet-within-a-film is pretty long, but there’s relatively little real dancing in it. Moira Shearer said later that she liked her dance sequences in “The Tales of Hoffmann” better, because she could really dance. It’s fascinating to watch, though. The other dance excerpts in “The Red Shoes” are very good, and I always get a kick out of the bit of “Swan Lake” that shows us what Shearer sees as she spots her turns – and there’s a cameo from Marie Rambert, no less.
Thank you for the pictures, rg. The DVD of “The Red Shoes” has some nice memorabilia, provided by Martin Scorsese from his own collection - he loves the movie.