The Guardian (USA)

Bare review – naked dance film conceals more than it reveals

- Phuong Le

While the sight of naked flesh has always been a sensitive area in cinema history, male frontal nudity elicits especially visceral responses. In a still male-dominated industry, it is woefully normal for female bodies to be seen as mere objects of desire. In contrast, a penis on screen still triggers shock, discomfort and even a vulnerabil­ity that some viewers, along with censors, find hard to confront. Through chroniclin­g the months-long rehearsals of a modern dance piece called Anima Ardens, for which every male dancer performs in the nude, Aleksandr M Vinogradov’s documentar­y aims to remove the taboos attached to the male form.

Bare could have been radical, or at least intriguing, but it really is dull.

This is partly due to the abstract nature of dance director Thierry Smits’ work. With an elusive ideal of masculinit­y in mind, he asks the dancers to perform like beasts and emphasises unsophisti­cated movements. At times, the troupe clearly feel frustrated, as if the piece exists in chunks rather than an emotional whole. The film’s structure is similarly unfocused. Beautiful shots of the dancers’ naked bodies contorting into abstract shapes are punctuated with millisecon­d-long inserts of words such as “MASCULINIT­Y”, “WEAKNESS” and “666”, flashing on a blank screen, and snippets of classical paintings that depict male nudity. Such hollow flourishes undermine the arresting physicalit­y of the dancers’ movements.

The film’s most uncomforta­ble moment, however, has nothing to do with nudity. In an early audition, a dancer questions the presence of the camera and shows concerns about being filmed naked. Only then does Smits explain that a documentar­y is being made. That this fact was not disclosed beforehand is particular­ly questionab­le. Ironically enough, a filmed performanc­e of Smits’ piece, also directed by Vinogradov, is available for free on Vimeo; if anything, it’s a more illuminati­ng and poetic work on the male form.

• Bare is released on 28 June on digital platforms.

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