Indeed, yes. Nina reminded me of an anxious swot in high school. Her acting consisted mostly of perpetual fretting.
I agree completely that the movie was both boring and overwrought. Those ludicrous special effects! When Nina's neck lengthened in the fight scene, I burst out laughing. And those grotesque wings! Oh, and the toes! So, so heavy-handed and infantile.
Another thing that drove me nuts is that Mr. Genius French Choreographer, Thomas, spoke entirely in the most hackneyed of clichés.
Bah, this is the first time I've bothered to think about it since watching it yesterday. Repulsion, on the other hand, has been much on my mind. Can't believe I had never gotten around to seeing it before. Catherine Deneuve was amazing. Eat your heart out, Natalie Portman (whom, by the way, I find likable; just not great).
Various things I'm reading about it all refer to Deneuve's character as sexually repressed, many as though that is the root of her illness (which is laughable). Certainly, she's got probs with menfolk, possibly because of some foul deed in her past. But to me the movie seems to chronicle a slightly wonky girl experiencing her first schizophrenic break. And one of the more horrible aspects of the movie, for me, is the way both her victims see only her beauty and are oblivious to her craziness. All she is to them is an object of desire; nothing else matters. I cheered when she killed them. I mean, come on, victim #1 breaks her door down (are we really supposed to accept this as an act of gallantry, not a prelude to rape?), and victim #2, surrounded by evidence of her lunacy, propositions and then jumps her instead of calling in the men in the white coats (who, in this movie, would probably have tried it on as well). The movie drips with contempt for men.
The reviews of the movie are revealing. The ones I've read are all by men, and all share the misguided notion that attractive women must by definition welcome the attentions their beauty draws. This quote from a 1965 NYT review says it all: "the weird and agitating mystery here is why a girl of such fascinating beauty should be as hostile as she is toward men." Reviewers also consistently characterize the first victim as an innocent and mostly view the second victim as comic relief. And more than one claim that Deneuve's character is opaque: she does mad things, but the reason is obscure--unless it's just that she needs to get laid.
I'm experiencing a little repulsion myself now.