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Through a young dancer's eyes, unforgettably played by Moira Shearer, we meet a young composer, played by Marius Goring, and we enter a ballet company under the leading dancer and choreographer Robert Helpmann. At the center of the company is the malevolent charming impresario Boris Lermontov. Lermontov lives through his creations. Under the authoritarian rule this charismatic ballet impresario, his proteges realize the full promise of their talents, but at a price: utter devotion to their art and complete loyalty to Lermontov himself. Under his guidance, the young ballerina is poised for superstardom, but earns Lermontov's scorn when she falls in love with the composer of "The Red Shoes," the ballet Lermontov is staging to showcase her talents. (official distributor synopsis)

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Reviews (4)

kaylin 

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English Powell and Pressburger and their another film, and in this case actually ballet triumf. A beautiful example of how it is possible to connect different kinds of art. Engaging a professional ballet dancer was the only option, and the creators were lucky. Moira Shearer looks simply amazing in Technicolor. She and her red shoes are the sun of this film, around which everything revolves. The finale is then a demonstration of the power of the creative duo. ()

NinadeL 

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English Everything that didn't work for me in Black Narcissus doesn't work here either, but The Red Shoes thankfully boasts some truly excellent ballet passages and acting by Adolf Anton Wilhelm Wohlbrück. This man is the star of many wonderful films. That's why I’m not concerned with an collision, the weird makeup for a color film, and the bland acting by Moira Shearer. I just let Boris Lermontov's ballet company play that perfect dream world over and over again. ()

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DaViD´82 

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English The romance novel walks miles in British Technicolor red shoes in a not-so short, fateful melodrama (with a forty minute prologue!) set in a ballet company about two gingers and one “Mephisto" compellingly played by Anton Walbrook. This trio battles that eternal western conflict of personal life and love versus career and ambitions. A movie which, on paper, I’m hopelessly compelled to loathe. But paper assumptions often aren’t valid. Thank god. And so just like how once every umpteen seasons Real Madrid defeats Barcelona, against all odds, the Red Shoes can, despite the black (red?) mark above, be as fantastic to watch as only the best pictures can. ()

Lima 

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English I couldn't pass up Martin Scorsese's beloved film (see his Criterion confession). Technicolour cinematography didn't look better anywhere else at the time, the ballet passage in the middle, shot with film techniques and tricks of the time, charmed me, I enjoyed the angles from which the camera sometimes shot the charismatic Anton Walbrook, making him look like a patient Mephistopheles at times. But I was disappointed by the ending, which I found too elementary. It needed more courage, more touch of reality. ()

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