Simran Hans 

Polina review – from Russia to love, a classical ballerina finds a new path

This coming-of-age tale boasts beautifully shot dance sequences and strong performances
  
  

Anastasia Shevtsova stars as Polina in Polina
Real-life dancer Anastasia Shevtsova stars as Polina in Polina. Photograph: PR

Based on Bastien Vivès’s 2011 graphic novel Polina, this stylish coming-of-age story follows the fortunes of young ballerina Polina (Veronika Zhovnytska), who is training under the fearsome Bojinski (Aleksey Guskov) at a Russian dance academy. His disciplined approach instils in her a rigid professionalism that helps secure her a place at the Bolshoi Ballet.

Yet in the restrictive environment of classical dance, the teenage Polina (real-life dancer Anastasia Shevtsova) feels she’s “just stringing moves together, not dancing”. Body and brain respectively awakened by a handsome French dancer (Niels Schneider, the actor’s charm not quite in full bloom here) and a contemporary choreographer (Juliette Binoche, with a particularly unflattering haircut), Polina abandons the stiff classicism she’s dedicated her life to. “I don’t want a pretty dancer,” says Binoche’s Liria. Though the film suggests a hardiness borne of her working-class background and mobster father, Polina remains fairly opaque. At least the contemporary dance sequences are beautifully mounted; French choreographer Angelin Preljocaj has a co-director credit on the film.

Watch the trailer for Polina here.
 

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