Luke wrote:
What do you mean by "it's"? The entire movie, the symbolism, the plot?
And yes, a big part of the academy award process involves reviewing acting performances. I thought that goes unsaid as there job is to review acting performances.
Sorry man, I just don't see your point.
I mean that the film, and Natalie Portman's performance is a meta-performance. It's about as meta as possible. The only film I've ever seen that is more meta is probably
My Dinner with Andre.
The film is about a performance, in this case, a ballet.
It focuses on Natalie Portman's character-- a performer attempting to secure a role and then preparing to perform it.
Alot (most?) of the symbolism in the film is about the internal struggles, personality, transformations, and identity issues/problems/experiences/et cetera that a performer (specifically, someone playing a character in some capacity) goes through (and inflicts on others) in becoming his or her character.
I called it oscar bait because the academy is made up of people in the film industry. A lot of them are actors, but I don't know the real breakdown or who is in it except for Gary Busey (as far as I'm concerned, nobody else could possibly matter). These folks would naturally be drawn to
Black Swan. I don't blame them; I'm an engineer and I love movies and books about engineers.
I could do a much more thorough amateur analysis/crappy-wall-of-text-nobody-will-read of the film, but hopefully I have more effectively conveyed what I intended to say in my previous post.
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