The Dancer Upstairs (film)
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| The Dancer Upstairs | |
|---|---|
| Directed by | John Malkovich |
| Produced by | Andrés Vicente Gómez John Malkovich |
| Written by | Nicholas Shakespeare |
| Starring | Javier Bardem Juan Diego Botto Laura Morante Elvira Mínguez |
| Music by | Alberto Iglesias Pedro Malgheas |
| Cinematography | José Luis Alcaine |
| Editing by | Mario Battistel |
| Distributed by | Fox Searchlight |
| Release date(s) | January 11, 2002 (Sundance Film Festival) |
| Running time | 133 min. |
| Country | U.S. Spain |
| Language | English |
| Allmovie profile | |
| IMDb profile | |
The Dancer Upstairs is a 2002 film starring Javier Bardem, and the directorial debut of John Malkovich. The film is an adaptation of the book of the same name by Nicholas Shakespeare.
Contents |
[edit] Plot
Detective Agustín Rejas (Bardem) is tracking the self-styled President Ezequiel (Abel Folk), a Marxist-influenced guerrilla waging a brutal terrorist campaign against the corrupt government of an unnamed Latin American country. Contrasting with the violence and death in his professional life, Rejas begins to fall for Yolanda (Laura Morante) - his daughter's beautiful ballet teacher. But she may not be all she appears, and his growing attraction to her brings him in direct conflict with his prey.
[edit] Historical Basis
The story is inspired by the Maoist insurgency in Peru known as the Shining Path. Its leader Abimael Guzmán, who was known by the nom de guerre President Gonzalo, was captured in an apartment above a ballet studio in the capital Lima in 1992. The ballet teacher Yolanda was based on Maritza Garrido Lecca, the woman in whose apartment Guzmán was found. Bardem's character was inspired by Benedicto Jimenez and General Antonio Ketin Vidal, the leading figures responsible for Guzmán's capture.[1]

