

Butoh: Body on the Edge of Crisis
"Butoh: Body on the Edge of Crisis" is a visually striking film portrait shot on location in Japan with the participation of the major Butoh choreographers and their companies. Although Butoh is often viewed as Japan's equivalent of modern dance, in actuality it has little to do with the rational principles of modernism. Butoh is a theater of improvisation which places the personal experiences of the dancer on center-stage. By reestablishing the ancient Japanese connection of dance, music, and masks, and by recalling the Buddhist death dances of rural Japan, Butoh incorporates much traditional theater. At the same time, it is a movement of resistance against the abandonment of traditional culture to a highly organized consumer-oriented society.
You may like

Appalachian Spring

Living Stars

National Gallery

Moving Together

Black Ballerina

The Happy Ones

Los posibles

The Performance

Kazuo Ohno: Beauty and Strength

Flowerbird Butoh: A Way of Life

Bobbi Jene

Patrick Grigo: Spotlight, Backstage & In Between

Stepping

The Euphoria of Being

Rize

United in Grief

Busby Berkeley: A Journey with a Star

Antonio Gades, la ética de la danza

A Plastic Ocean

Air Force Elite: Thunderbirds

Nude

Elstree 1976

Our Planet: Behind the Scenes

Looking for Richard