• Latest
  • Trending
The Performance Review

The Performance Review: When Art Imitates Life’s Hardest Choices

Phineas and Ferb Season 5 Review

Phineas and Ferb Season 5 Review: Another 104 Days in a Perfect Clockwork Universe

Next Gen NYC Season 1 Review

Next Gen NYC Season 1 Review: The Unsettling Inheritance of Reality TV

Rachel Zoe

Bravo Confirms Rachel Zoe for “Real Housewives of Beverly Hills” Return

2 hours ago
Étoile

Prime Video Ends Étoile After One Season Despite Two-Season Commitment

2 hours ago
SDSA Awards Television 2024-2025

SDSA Reveals 2024–2025 TV Awards Nominations; White Lotus, Severance Among Leaders

2 hours ago
Ekta Kapoor

Ekta Kapoor and Netflix India Ink Long-Term Content Pact

2 hours ago
iHostage Review

iHostage Review: Competent, Cold, and Concerning

The Thirteenth Wife Escaping Polygamy Review

The Thirteenth Wife: Escaping Polygamy Review: Surviving the Prophet

Love on the Danube Kissing Stars Review

Love on the Danube: Kissing Stars Review: Meta-Romance on the River

Criminal Code Season 2 Review

Criminal Code Season 2 Review: No Clean Hands on the Border

Predator Killer of Killers Review

Predator: Killer of Killers Review: Three Portraits of Prey

Lilo & Stitch Review

U.K. Cinemas Hit Post-Pandemic High on Disney and Paramount Launches

20 hours ago
  • Home
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Gazettely Review Guidelines
Saturday, June 7, 2025
GAZETTELY
  • Home
  • Movie and TV News
    Rachel Zoe

    Bravo Confirms Rachel Zoe for “Real Housewives of Beverly Hills” Return

    Étoile

    Prime Video Ends Étoile After One Season Despite Two-Season Commitment

    SDSA Awards Television 2024-2025

    SDSA Reveals 2024–2025 TV Awards Nominations; White Lotus, Severance Among Leaders

    Ekta Kapoor

    Ekta Kapoor and Netflix India Ink Long-Term Content Pact

    Lilo & Stitch Review

    U.K. Cinemas Hit Post-Pandemic High on Disney and Paramount Launches

    bbc Have I Got News For You

    BBC Satire Show Fast-Tracks Trump–Musk Feud Into Season Finale

    Dogma

    Dogma Returns: Kevin Smith Secures Rights, Launches 2,000-Screen Re-Release

    Don't Breathe 3

    Stephen Lang Sets Terms for Don’t Breathe 3

    Jim Jarmusch

    Jarmusch’s Father Mother Sister Brother Secures Venice Competition Slot

  • Movie and TV Reviews
    Phineas and Ferb Season 5 Review

    Phineas and Ferb Season 5 Review: Another 104 Days in a Perfect Clockwork Universe

    Next Gen NYC Season 1 Review

    Next Gen NYC Season 1 Review: The Unsettling Inheritance of Reality TV

    iHostage Review

    iHostage Review: Competent, Cold, and Concerning

    The Thirteenth Wife Escaping Polygamy Review

    The Thirteenth Wife: Escaping Polygamy Review: Surviving the Prophet

    Love on the Danube Kissing Stars Review

    Love on the Danube: Kissing Stars Review: Meta-Romance on the River

    Criminal Code Season 2 Review

    Criminal Code Season 2 Review: No Clean Hands on the Border

    Predator Killer of Killers Review

    Predator: Killer of Killers Review: Three Portraits of Prey

    From the World of John Wick Ballerina Review

    From the World of John Wick: Ballerina Review: A Savage New Dancer Takes the Stage

    The Correspondent Review

    The Correspondent Review: Richard Roxburgh’s Tour de Force

  • Game Reviews
    Without a Dawn Review

    Without a Dawn Review: Introspection in a Cabin of Shadows

    Aureole – Wings of Hope Review

    Aureole – Wings of Hope Review: Precision Platforming with a Divine Twist

    Kingdom Come: Deliverance II Brushes with Death Review

    Kingdom Come: Deliverance II Brushes with Death Review: A Painter’s Tale in Bohemia

    Kulebra and the Souls of Limbo Review

    Kulebra and the Souls of Limbo Review: Guiding Spirits with Style and Sincerity

    Blacksmith Master Review

    Blacksmith Master Review: The Satisfying Grind of Metal and Management

    Labyrinth Of The Demon King Review

    Labyrinth Of The Demon King Review: Unforgiving, Unforgettable Horror

    Cubic Odyssey Review

    Cubic Odyssey Review: An Ambitious Architect’s Space Dream

    Game of Thrones: Kingsroad Review

    Game of Thrones: Kingsroad Review: A Song of Systems and Sorrows

    To a T Review

    To a T Review: Finding Perfection in an Imperfect Shape

  • The Bests
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Movie and TV News
    Rachel Zoe

    Bravo Confirms Rachel Zoe for “Real Housewives of Beverly Hills” Return

    Étoile

    Prime Video Ends Étoile After One Season Despite Two-Season Commitment

    SDSA Awards Television 2024-2025

    SDSA Reveals 2024–2025 TV Awards Nominations; White Lotus, Severance Among Leaders

    Ekta Kapoor

    Ekta Kapoor and Netflix India Ink Long-Term Content Pact

    Lilo & Stitch Review

    U.K. Cinemas Hit Post-Pandemic High on Disney and Paramount Launches

    bbc Have I Got News For You

    BBC Satire Show Fast-Tracks Trump–Musk Feud Into Season Finale

    Dogma

    Dogma Returns: Kevin Smith Secures Rights, Launches 2,000-Screen Re-Release

    Don't Breathe 3

    Stephen Lang Sets Terms for Don’t Breathe 3

    Jim Jarmusch

    Jarmusch’s Father Mother Sister Brother Secures Venice Competition Slot

  • Movie and TV Reviews
    Phineas and Ferb Season 5 Review

    Phineas and Ferb Season 5 Review: Another 104 Days in a Perfect Clockwork Universe

    Next Gen NYC Season 1 Review

    Next Gen NYC Season 1 Review: The Unsettling Inheritance of Reality TV

    iHostage Review

    iHostage Review: Competent, Cold, and Concerning

    The Thirteenth Wife Escaping Polygamy Review

    The Thirteenth Wife: Escaping Polygamy Review: Surviving the Prophet

    Love on the Danube Kissing Stars Review

    Love on the Danube: Kissing Stars Review: Meta-Romance on the River

    Criminal Code Season 2 Review

    Criminal Code Season 2 Review: No Clean Hands on the Border

    Predator Killer of Killers Review

    Predator: Killer of Killers Review: Three Portraits of Prey

    From the World of John Wick Ballerina Review

    From the World of John Wick: Ballerina Review: A Savage New Dancer Takes the Stage

    The Correspondent Review

    The Correspondent Review: Richard Roxburgh’s Tour de Force

  • Game Reviews
    Without a Dawn Review

    Without a Dawn Review: Introspection in a Cabin of Shadows

    Aureole – Wings of Hope Review

    Aureole – Wings of Hope Review: Precision Platforming with a Divine Twist

    Kingdom Come: Deliverance II Brushes with Death Review

    Kingdom Come: Deliverance II Brushes with Death Review: A Painter’s Tale in Bohemia

    Kulebra and the Souls of Limbo Review

    Kulebra and the Souls of Limbo Review: Guiding Spirits with Style and Sincerity

    Blacksmith Master Review

    Blacksmith Master Review: The Satisfying Grind of Metal and Management

    Labyrinth Of The Demon King Review

    Labyrinth Of The Demon King Review: Unforgiving, Unforgettable Horror

    Cubic Odyssey Review

    Cubic Odyssey Review: An Ambitious Architect’s Space Dream

    Game of Thrones: Kingsroad Review

    Game of Thrones: Kingsroad Review: A Song of Systems and Sorrows

    To a T Review

    To a T Review: Finding Perfection in an Imperfect Shape

  • The Bests
No Result
View All Result
GAZETTELY
No Result
View All Result
The Performance Review

The Sinister Side of Pokémon: Pecharunt's Story Revealed

Death and Other Details Review: A Draining Game of Clue at Sea

Home Entertainment Movies

The Performance Review: When Art Imitates Life’s Hardest Choices

The Perilous Politics of Performance

Arash Nahandian by Arash Nahandian
1 year ago
in Entertainment, Movies, Reviews
Reading Time: 6 mins read
A A
0
Share on FacebookShare on TwitterShare on PinterestShare on WhatsAppShare on Telegram

Shira Piven’s The Performance throws us onstage and behind the scenes of a fateful artistic choice. This period drama, adapted from an Arthur Miller short story, follows Harold May, a Jewish tap dancer invited to perform for Hitler himself in 1937 Berlin.

Though initially hesitant, Harold talks his troupe into staying in Germany to stage an elaborate dance spectacle, refusing to acknowledge the rising danger. As swastikas and grand theatrics flood the screen, we’re left pondering our own blurred lines between ambition, identity, and integrity. Would we compromise so much for art and a spotlight too?

Tap Dancing into Danger

Harold May has some fancy footwork, but not enough gigs. We meet this gifted tap dancer in 1936 as he tours Europe with his scrappy dance troupe, desperately seeking paying audiences. Despite their talent, Harold and his team of hoofers – including ladies’ man Benny, closeted dancer Paul, and Harold’s on-off flame Carol – waltz from one stingy club owner to the next.

But in the Balkans, the troupe taps its way into an unusual fan: Damian Fuglar, a soft-spoken German mesmerized by Harold’s skill. He offers the dancers an expenses-paid trip to Berlin’s elite Kick Club, with a handsome payout to perform for a packed theater. Despite Benny’s warnings about Germany’s hostility, dollar signs dance in Harold’s eyes. He convinces the group that his Jewish heritage won’t be an issue – he’s passed for gentile before.

Touching down in Berlin, Harold and company relish VIP treatment from eager hotel staff. As opening night nears, however, the club suddenly shutters. Panic sets in…until Fuglar reveals the coveted “guest of honor” – none other than Adolf Hitler himself. Now, Harold faces a choice: flee or provide the show of a lifetime, even with a monster in the audience. Ambition wins out – refusing danger, Harold talks the hesitant troupe into staying in Germany. As swastikas multiply around them, they begin intense rehearsals for Harold’s swastika-tinged magnum opus, willfully blind to reality’s tap on the shoulder.

“Venture into the dark side of love with our Alice and Jack review, a unique but mostly joyless immersion into the complexities of a tumultuous relationship.”

Balancing Acts: Identity, Art, and Morality

The Performance examines Harold’s balancing act between identity, artistic passion, and moral compromise. To chase his showbiz dreams in anti-Semitic climates, he hides his Jewish heritage to “pass” as gentile – already performing an off-stage role. Meanwhile, Fuglar argues that art “unifies” despite politics. He serves up Hitler’s applause, funding, and facilities – appeasing Harold’s driving question: isn’t any audience better than none?

The Performance Review

Harold takes Fuglar’s bait through rationalization and willful blindness. Despite surrounding swastika flags and violence against “undesirables,” Harold convinces himself that the Third Reich couldn’t possibly condone such brutality forever. “These aren’t some freaky moon people,” he declares bizarrely. “They have refrigerators.” Through incremental denial, he talk himself into not just performing for Hitler – but becoming his de facto artistic director.

Ultimately, the film probes: what would we sacrifice at ambition’s altar? How far would we skew identity or minimize injustice to grasp long-denied success? Piven poses these questions not through speeches but through her protagonist’s descent. We cringe as Harold, drunk on attention, continually dismisses danger to his troupe while polishing his swastika-tinged masterwork. The Performance suggests that complicity with oppression often stems not from overt support, but from an inability to cease small surrenders. When normalized, rationalization creeps slowly – much like Harold’s willingness to exploit artistic liberty in Berlin before ultimately trying to tap dance his way out.

Standout Performances

Jeremy Piven taps into a career-best turn as Harold, conveying emotional complexity through dance and difficult choices. We watch Harold’s facial ticks and body language communicate internal rationalization costuming his decisions. While best known for snappy comedic roles, Piven’s background in theater serves him beautifully to navigate Harold’s moral minefield. His extensive tap training also gives raw authenticity to Harold’s signature skill, even while dancing with broken ribs.

Equally chilling is Robert Carlyle’s Damian Fuglar, harboring nefariousness in gentlemanly tones. As a failed performer himself, Fuglar lives vicariously through Harold’s art, puppeteering his troupe with contracts and kindness. Carlyle terrifies precisely by underplaying evil as mere devotion – to Hitler, and to producing Harold’s grand artistic vision.

Supporting players establish troupe rapport, but pale beside the central duo. We believe Harold and Carol’s romantic past; Benny and Paul’s personalities provide sparks. But for runtime given to dance sequences, more dimensionality for these backing dancers could better raise the stakes. Still, enough is etched to believe their camaraderie – and make their unraveling behind enemy lines more tragic. What truly captivates is watching Piven and Carlyle toy with truth through art, external success shielding internal instability…until one final revealing performance.

Visual Vibrancy on a Budget

While The Performance tackles weighty ideas, director Shira Piven infuses stylistic verve fitting its song-and-dance spirit. Dynamic camerawork keeps the film’s motion fluid, while rapid editing amplifies both dance spectacle and creeping unease in Berlin. Grimes’ impressive choreography takes center stage, with tip-tapping feet made thunderous through sound design. Production designer Lucia Škandíková also crafts decadent 1930s interiors on a modest indie budget.

The Performance Review

Piven took a stylish risk shooting partially with 16mm film alongside digital footage, interspersed with actual 1930s archival material. This fusion of textures casts an immersive, old-world spell while retaining modern crispness in dance segments. Despite financial limitations, creative editing gives dance numbers enthralling dynamism – seen especially in the sinister climax, where glitzy spectacle and trauma collide.

Location shooting in Slovakia fills in convincingly for Berlin, with Ukrainian war refugees included as background extras, poignantly tying past human rights atrocities to those still unfolding. Through crafty design, camerawork, and editing, The Performance squeezes impressive technical mileage from its lean budget. The film’s layers of illusion comment slyly on Hitler’s own staging of political theater – where nothing is entirely as it seems, either onscreen or off.

Relevance Through the Ages

While The Performance pulls its story directly from 1930s history, its themes resonate far beyond that period. The film provokes timeless questions about ambition’s tipping points, identity’s fluidity, and integrity’s grey areas that still speak volumes today.

The Performance Review

In mining this moral territory, The Performance joins a long lineage of films grappling with silent complicity and ambition’s costs, from Cabaret to Mephisto. Like its characters, we may flatter ourselves that “it couldn’t happen today” when witnessing their rationalizations. But while its setting may be pre-WWII Berlin, the film holds up a disquieting mirror to human contradictions at any point in history.

Indeed, The Performance lands amidst no shortage of modern stories examining slippery slopes, from exotic dancers justifying problematic policies to celebrities booking controversial private gigs. As Piven’s film underscores, every age brings different “stages” upon which these ethical balancing acts play out.

But certain provocative questions endure across all generations and backdrops, which The Performance poses potently: What prices will we pay for success? How far could we distance ourselves from truth for the sake of survival or status? And if given the chance at forbidden spotlights, would any of us truly refrain from that siren song’s spectacle? By exploring timeless human foibles alongside unique historical horrors, The Performance suggests perhaps not.

Confronting Complicity

For all its glamorous dances and 1930s flair, The Performance contemporary resonance endures. As Piven demonstrates, incremental rationalization rarely announces itself with fanfare – but through palatable concessions mushrooming into calamity.

The Performance Review

Harold stands among many artists and entertainers who traded principles for patronage or visibility – some even collaborating actively in oppression. While Piven never equates Harold’s choices to such extreme complicity, she underscores how the path there beginsgradually, fueled by understandable human desires.

Uneven pacing and thinly-drawn players briefly distract. But compelling work from Piven and Carlyle anchor the film’s chilling power. Through them, The Performance emerges a technically impressive period drama on a modest budget – and a disquieting mirror reflecting our own bargaining with ambition. As its finale questions, if given the chance for success by standing silently amid injustice, how long would we dance? And at what cost to our humanity?

By confronting muted complicity’s dangers, The Performance sounds its cautionary horn for dreamers and sellouts alike. Because occasionally, talent and virtue must break from choreography…and tap out their own beat.

The Review

The Performance

8 Score

The Performance is a haunting, visually vibrant drama that confronts our complex relationship with ambition and integrity. Shira Piven deftly guides an emotionally complex story between the toes of history, brought to life through Jeremy Piven's phenomenal lead performance. Uneven pacing and thinly-written characters dent the shine in moments. But the film's thoughtful themes, technical artistry, and chilling turns from Piven and Carlyle make The Performance impossible to ignore. A confrontational showstopper for our times.

PROS

  • Phenomenal lead performance by Jeremy Piven
  • Chilling and nuanced supporting turn by Robert Carlyle
  • Impressive period recreation and visual style on a modest budget
  • Thought-provoking themes still resonant today
  • Strong dance choreography and energetic editing

CONS

  • Uneven pacing slows momentum in parts
  • Supporting characters lack dimensionality
  • Some plot elements could be developed further

Review Breakdown

  • Overall 0
Tags: DramaFeaturedJeremy PivenJosh SalzbergMaimie McCoyRobert CarlyleShira PivenThe Performance
Previous Post

The Sinister Side of Pokémon: Pecharunt’s Story Revealed

Next Post

Death and Other Details Review: A Draining Game of Clue at Sea

Try AI Movie Recommender

Gazettely AI Movie Recommender

This Week's Top Reads

  • Boglands Review

    Boglands Review: Shadows and Whispers in the Irish Mist

    1 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Stick Season 1 Review: Owen Wilson Drives a Heartfelt, Flawed Dramedy

    2 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Mad Unicorn Review: Ambition and Its Echoes in the Global Stream

    1 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Mountainhead Review: Deepfakes and Deep Trouble

    1 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • The Black Forest Murders Review: Beyond Spectacle, Into the Grim Expanse

    2 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • MobLand Season 1 Review: Family Ties and Underworld Intrigues

    1 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Spit Review: A Poetic Examination of Existential Absurdity

    3 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0

Must Read Articles

Phineas and Ferb Season 5 Review
TV Shows

Phineas and Ferb Season 5 Review: Another 104 Days in a Perfect Clockwork Universe

1 hour ago
Predator Killer of Killers Review
Entertainment

Predator: Killer of Killers Review: Three Portraits of Prey

19 hours ago
From the World of John Wick Ballerina Review
Entertainment

From the World of John Wick: Ballerina Review: A Savage New Dancer Takes the Stage

1 day ago
Bullet Train Explosion Review
Movies

Bullet Train Explosion Review: Bureaucracy, Bombs, and the Weight of Duty

4 days ago
Game of Thrones: Kingsroad Review
Reviews Games

Game of Thrones: Kingsroad Review: A Song of Systems and Sorrows

7 days ago
Loading poll ...
Coming Soon
Who is the best director in the horror thriller genre?

Gazettely is your go-to destination for all things gaming, movies, and TV. With fresh reviews, trending articles, and editor picks, we help you stay informed and entertained.

© 2021-2024 All Rights Reserved for Gazettely

What’s Inside

  • Movie & TV Reviews
  • Game Reviews
  • Featured Articles
  • Latest News
  • Editorial Picks

Quick Links

  • Home
  • About US
  • Contact Us
  • Advertise with Us
  • Review Guidelines

Follow Us

Facebook X-twitter Youtube Instagram
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Movies
  • Entertainment News
  • Movie and TV Reviews
  • TV Shows
  • Game News
  • Game Reviews
  • Contact Us

© 2024 All Rights Reserved for Gazettely

Go to mobile version