Watch unlimited films online for $6.99.
Try MUBI for FREE.
 

The Diaries of Vaslav Nijinsky

Australia, Sweden, Germany, Netherlands

2001

95 Min
Color, Black and White
English
  • Currently 1.0/5 Stars.
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5

   |   

DIR Paul Cox

EXEC Kevin Lucas, William T. Marshall

PROD Paul Cox, Aanya Whitehead

SCR Paul Cox, Vaslav Nijinsky

DP Paul Cox, Hans Sonneveld

CAST Derek Jacobi, Delia Silvan, Chris Haywood, Hans Sonneveld, Oliver Streeton, Jillian Smith, Kevin Lucas, David Gallasch, Aanya Whitehead, Gabriella Joy Smart, Lisa Heaven, Patricia Cellier, Kyra Cox, Anandine Merino

ED Paul Cox

PROD DES Neil Angwin, Angeline Bremer, Tony Cronin

MUSIC Paul Grabowsky

SOUND James Currie

Rotterdam (Main Programme Features), Toronto

Synopsis

At the end of 1917 Vaslav Nijinsky and his wife Romola and their daughter Kyra were in St. Moritz, waiting for the end of the war. The famous dancer was no longer working for Diaghilev’s famous Ballets Russes and really had nowhere to turn. A year later he had a nervous breakdown. He kept a record of the battle he started to fight in a diary.Almost fifteen years after Cox’ famous film portrait of Van Gogh (Vincent), he returns to a theme very close to his heart: the artist who has to balance on the edge. His filming of Nijinsky’s diaries is a real labour of love: Cox worked on and off for dozens of years on the film.The diary fragments are narrated beautifully in the film by Sir Derek Jacobi. Cox is very inventive in finding images to match the words. The film alternates between poetic, almost abstract images of nature, settings of Nijinsky’s choreographies in the open air, fragments from his family life and historic images. Nijinsky emerges in the film as a complex character, an apolitical yet profound thinker who suddenly feels very close to God, albeit in a pantheistic way. His thoughts on Diaghilev, Nietzsche and Christ are juxtaposed with ideas about eating meat and masturbation and thoughts of his wife and daughter. Cox’ film is an ode to life, music, dance and, in the end, film. —IFFR

Director

Original

Paul Cox

Dutch-born filmmaker Paul Cox settled in his adopted homeland of Australia in the mid-1960s and spent over thirty years there honing his craft before becoming disillusioned with the difficulties in raising financing and decamped for Europe. Cox’s oeuvre is comprised of mostly cerebral work that challenges audiences and fly in the face of conventional Hollywood fare.

When Cox first settled in Australia, he enjoyed some notice as a photographer. He also was pursuing the hobby of making Super 8 films and eventually moved into filmmaking, first with “Matuta” (1965) which was followed by a long string of documentaries and short films. In 1976, he directed his first feature film “Illuminations” and then gained international attention with the charming but offbeat romance “Lonely Hearts” (1981). Cox’s particular blend of verite and artifice in his subsequent work, though, often divided critics who found his efforts well-acted if somewhat slowly paced and talky. His films, including… read more

Wall

Displaying 0 wall posts.

Related Films

Fans

Displaying 1 of 1 fans.

Lists

Displaying 4 of 4 lists.

Reviews

No reviews yet — Write the first

Forum

Displaying 0 discussion topics.