Showing posts with label dreams. Show all posts
Showing posts with label dreams. Show all posts

Wednesday, 19 January 2022

What Are Dreams?

Insightful Journey Into The Human Mind



       Slightly psychedelic while at the same time gripping and imaginativeManiac is an insightful journey into multiple universes inside the human mind. With its dreamlike landscapes and impressive alternative realities, the series gives you something to think about while at the same time leaves a mark with its artistry.

    Owen and Annie meet during a trial phase of a revolutionary drug designed to eliminate depression and suffering from the entire human experience. The testing consists of 3 phases. The first one confronts the subjects with their most painful trauma. The second one exposes them to dreamlike realities, loosely based on their own lives. In the third stage, a powerful emotional transformation allows them to leave their suffering behind and move on. The plan sounds straightforward, but soon, unexpected complications appear, threatening the safety of the patients.

   The idea brings to mind similar concepts from Inception or The Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind. What are dreams and the realities we experience in them? Identifying them with something meaningful adds value to nearly 35% of our existence spent on sleeping. The characters find relief in their dreaming minds. When they, however, dismiss those experiences as unreal or trivial, their emotional pain comes back.

        The production also shows that one can be misdiagnosed with mental illness, carrying a heavy burden of alienation. Overconfidence in labelling patients with psychiatric conditions is downgrading and unjustified as we still have limited knowledge of the complexity of the human brain.


    
    In Maniac, visually suggestive worlds transform into exciting landscapes. The unfolding scenarios lead us in unpredictable directions. The title suggests drastic, heavy content, which is inaccurate for this intelligent and visionary production. Aside from the impressive leading characters played by Emma Stone (LaLaLand) and Jonah Hill (The Woolf of Wall Street)I was stunned by the performance of Sonoya Mizen in the role of Dr Fujita - the charismatic and formidable force pushing the experiment towards completion.

    

Agnes Prygiel, London 27.01.2022

Tuesday, 14 December 2021

Christmas Special Reinvented

The Nutcracker by Matthew Bourne





It is hard to believe how quickly time flies! A couple of weeks ago, I celebrated the premiere of Matthew Bourne's new play "The Midnight Bell" during the night out with Ken Loach and my friends. Now I am counting the days to Christmas, delighting in another production by the same director.


For theatre and ballet enthusiasts, "The Nutcracker" is like "Kevin Home Alone" for film lovers. It is a Christmas must-see! Experiencing the play for the first time in Bourne's interpretation last Sunday in the Sadler's Wells Theatre teleported me into the world of magic. I was walking the streets of London feeling light-hearted as if I had entered a new dimension.


This hugely celebrated play has been reinvented for us using modern technology such as 3D mapping, creating magnificent effects on stage. Lengthy ballet sequences have been removed from it altogether. The baseline of the story and the music by Pyotr Illyich Tchaikovsky stayed the same.  


In the beginning, we see a sinister orphanage in a distorted perspective. Monochromatic costumes and collapsing angles of the set bring op art and Salvador Dali's paintings to mind. Everything is for a show in this grim institution where discipline rules over love. Kids perform daily activities in front of wealthy benefactors and, in return, are given Christmas presents, amongst which there is an unusual nutcracker in a shape of a boy puppet. 


When the kids fall asleep, one of the girls dreams up an alternative universe with all the characters from her daily life in new roles. In her fantasy, the nutcracker comes to life as a Frankenstein oddity. He comes across as frightening at first but soon wins the orphans' trust by helping them escape from the oppressive establishment, leading them into the beautiful world of imagination. 


The colours and the set change, contrasting with the previous sombre background. Soft light and feathery shapes dominate the scene. The actors appear in new costumes: fluffy hats, floating skirts and white suits. The second act moves us more into the Alice-in-the-Wonderland-like reality, with bonbon decorations, unusual new characters and even more flamboyant outfits designed by Anthony WardTo the young girl’s despair, the Nutcracker turns into a handsome young man but regrettably falls in love with an overconfident and cheeky Princess Sugar. Will the unimposing orphan be able to win him back?


I can only use one word to describe the show: impressive. Like in all Matthew Bourne's plays, dance, acting, set design, costumes, and sound come together, forming a fantastic theatrical experience. It is like nothing you have ever seen before. 


Matthew Bourne's interpretation of "The Nutcracker", co-written with Martin Duncan, had its' first premiere in 1992. From that moment on, it has been inspiring new audiences worldwide. The director mentions essential changes introduced this season. If you have seen the play before, I am sure it will surprise and leave you speechless, moving your heart and imagination again.


Agnes Prygiel, 14/12/2021 London