Igor Stravinsky - Le Rossignol (The Nightingale)/ Dessay, McLaughlin, Urmana, Grivnov, Schagidullin, Naouri, Mikhailov, Conlon
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Average customer review:Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #66393 in DVD
- Released on: 2005-11-08
- Rating: NR (Not Rated)
- Aspect ratio: 1.33:1
- Number of discs: 1
- Formats: Classical, Color, DVD, NTSC
- Original language: Russian, French
- Subtitled in: German, English, French, Italian, Spanish
- Number of discs: 1
- Running time: 50 minutes
Customer Reviews
Stunning objet d'art finds its way to the public
As I watched this DVD with giddy anticipation, already a lover of Stravinsky and even his much-maligned opera "Le Rossignol" - one he started and then abandoned in order to start and complete his triptych of ballets, L'oiseau de feu, Petrouchka, Le Sacre du printemps, only to return to Rossignol as a man with a very different harmonic and rhythmic vocabulary, thus creating something of a stylistic collision between Act 1 and Acts 2 and 3 - I kept shaking my head in sweet disbelief that this production was green-lighted for director Christian Chaudet, so dazzlingly creative is his vision, his colorfully whimsical and yet artful application of CGI-based environments and chinoiserie; a visual feast beyond compare that will forever change the way you look at porcelain china :), and yet all very much in the service of Stravinsky's score. In the liner notes, Chaudet admits that the music is in no way the soundtrack to his film, but commendably, the images are the soundtrack to Stravinsky's music. And yet, the film transcends the opera genre, being in no way a literal depiction of the libretto, and for that matter could find a happy home in any families' collection of adventurous Miyazaki films (perhaps even alongside an animated Disney title like Alice in Wonderland). And all of this is to say nothing of Natalie Dessay's ethereally beautiful Nightingale, with fine contributions from all of the cast, including a well-paced and perfectly colorful rendering of the score by James Conlon and the Orchestre de l'Opera National de Paris. Bravo!
Classical Animation
I tuned into this midway through late one night on PBS and had to find out what it was. The mix of live action and CG is totally captivating, no small achievement in this age of big-budget special effects. I especially appreciate how the imagery, which cleverly integrates a campy Orientalism with the paraphernalia of the digital age, has a brash, disturbing edge to it that matches Stravinsky's music. This isn't your grandma's Hans Christian Andersen, and I don't think Stravinsky wanted it to be. Christian Chaudet deserves a lot of credit for finding a way to re-enchant these classics while staying true to their spirit. Well worth watching.
Extraordinary and Beautiful Re-imagining
This amazing film blends 3-D computer graphics with live action and it is simply brimming with creativity and ideas. The tips of hundreds of violin bows appear out of the mist-covered ground. We inhabit a weird yet wonderful world run by an all-powerful "man behind the curtain" who happens to be personified by two black gloves manipulating an enormous control console. "He" has hundreds of assistents sitting in front of computer screens, typing away in rhythm with the music. There are Gigantic Chinese Urns inhabited with dancing girls instead of Genii. There are courtiers who appear as heads inside of Chinese lanterns. There are crowds of black-gloves applauding wildly and pointing at the scenery to get some bit of stagecraft done. There is a cigarette-smoking death (Violeta Urmana), in league with a mad flying, clicking bar-code applier, and there is the Nightingale (Natalie Dessay) who sings most beautifully, and makes a present of a cellphone to the Great Emperor. Does all of this sound weird? Well, I suppose it is... a bit. But it is also stunning, moving, and, yes, even awe inspiring.




