Billy Elliot
"And what do you like about ballet?" the stony-faced examiner at the Royal
Ballet School asks 11-year-old Billy Elliot (Jamie Bell), who's fought his way
to an audition from the coal-smudged alleys of the north of England. Groping
for a serious enough answer, he finally blurts out, "The dancing." And it's the
dancing that transfigures Stephen Daldry's movie about being different in a
world of sameness.
Although music from Swan Lake is heard throughout, we don't see even a
snippet of high ballet -- and neither has Billy until his fateful audition. His
life is bleak and comfortless, and the family -- robbed of their mother at the
beginning of the film -- sink into poverty as a miners' strike drags into the
winter months. Grandma (Jean Heywood) is halfway to dementia; older brother
Tony (Jamie Draven) and father (Gary Lewis), locked in silent machismo, get
more and more furious at the union's impotence -- and their own.
When Billy accidentally wanders into a local dancing class taught by the bored
and discouraged Mrs. Wilkinson (Julie Walters), it absorbs his pre-adolescent
energy and anger better than a punching bag or a trampoline. Frustrated but
with a mysterious determination to learn, he begins to conquer his body, and he
understands how much this means. Every crisis in his struggle to keep his new
identity is a dance: his boogie duet with his teacher, his first pirouette, his
kicking slamming rage when his father finds out and forbids him to continue.
The dance of Billy's initiation into ballet is intercut with the mass violence
of the miners' strike. Little girls in tutus twinkling their toes alternate
with mobs of strikers hurling eggs at a bus full of scabs. Ballet is somehow
tangled up with sexuality too -- all the men he knows think ballet dancers are
poufs. His school friend Michael likes to dress up in his mum's clothes.
Debbie, the teacher's precocious daughter, offers to let him see her bum. Billy
is confused about everything except that he wants to keep on dancing.
Thirteen-year-old Jamie Bell is no exquisite ballet boy. He doesn't
miraculously achieve perfection. His dance is awkward, blustery, flung wildly
all over the room, with everything he's ever seen thrown in: ballet, boogie,
clogging. It's also instinctively expressive -- rough and earnest and
beautiful.