“Dance
the winds will touch your feet, just dance and
dance feel the beat, dance the last atom cutting
a knot,
just dance and dance until you cannot” -
Miroslava Odalovic
I sometimes have dreams about being in a place
with gorgeous colors and heightened emotions and
a feeling of weightlessness. I was thinking
about these dreams while watching the dancers
whirling and spinning with abandonment in Pina,
Wim Wenders' 3-D extraordinary documentary
tribute to the late dance choreographer Pina
Bausch. Bausch was a pioneer in the world of
modern dance whose innovations forever changed
the landscape of modern dance, and who died
unexpectedly before the filming began. The
documentary consists of Pina's most well-known
dance pieces with their themes of pain and
loneliness. These are interspersed with comments
by the performers about their relationship with
Pina and about their own performance standards.
Although some of the comments can be somewhat
intrusive when interrupting the flow of a dance
routine, they are also very personal and quite
revealing. One dancer talked about Pina as a
painter and the dancers as her paint. Bausch's
advice was usually short but very telling, such
as her simple comment to one dancer to “keep on
searching.” The unnamed dancers in Pina's “dance
theater” create a blend of dance and drama that
resembles psychodrama with music. Some of Pina's
most popular pieces are presented including a
dance to “The Rite of Spring” (Le Sacre du
Printemps) by Igor Stravinsky, a piece called
“Café Muller” staged in a large room
using chairs as a creative prop.
In one of the dances, a man rhythmically adjusts
the arms of an embracing couple until the woman
leaps into his arms and then drops to the floor.
This sequence is repeated over and over at a
faster speed. The dances are performed to opera,
classical pieces, and folk songs that are
serenely beautiful. In “Vollmond,” (full moon)
dancers splash with gusto in the water beside a
large rock. “Kontakthof” is set on the stage of
a large theater in which dancers of all ages
move in rhythm with each other, forming and
reforming lines across the stage. In a humorous
piece that takes place on a monorail, one dancer
has a confrontation with a pillow while another
sits in the back seat with two large rabbit ears
on his head.
While we learn little about Pina's personal life
or her interpretation of the dances she has
created, the dances speak for themselves and do
so in a way that is both aesthetically appealing
and spiritually resonant. With supple movement,
energy, and rhythm, the dancers express
themselves with reckless exuberance, yet Pina
tells one dancer that, “you have to get
crazier,” thus pushing them to the limit of
their abilities, telling them - and us - to
"dance, dance, otherwise we are lost.”
GRADE: B+