Egon Schiele: Dangerous Desires

Aired on BBC Two, Saturday 10th November 2018

Artistic Director Amit Lahav worked on movement direction and casting for BBC2’s documentary about Austrian painter Egon Schiele, Egon Schiele: Dangerous Desires, directed by Teresa GriffithsShown on BBC2 in the week coinciding with the 100th anniversary of Schiele’s death, the documentary told the story of Schiele’s short and dramatic life in his own words, using original letters and writings.

The documentary used Lahav’s choreography to convey the expressiveness of Schiele’s work, focusing on its physicality and humanity.

★★★★★ Financial Times
“Interspersed dramatised episodes are not unusual in this kind of documentary but here they have an extra, thrilling dimension… Quasi-balletic interludes also fit the artist’s vision of forceful movement capturing extreme emotional states.”

“Struck down by the Spanish Flu in 1918, aged just 28, in his short life Egon Schiele created over 3,000 drawings and paintings, self-portraits and nudes. An agent provocateur of the modernist era, he was a taboo-busting rebel whose art looks like it was made yesterday - self-obsessed, exhibitionist and unafraid to confront questions of sexuality and identity.

To mark the anniversary of Schiele's death a century ago, this film tells Schiele's dramatic story in his own words, using original letters and writings - many of them translated for the first time. The film celebrates his remarkable artistic achievements but also debates the controversies around his work.

His sexually frank images shocked early 20th-century Vienna and still challenge us today. But are these the images of empowered women in control - or figures of of voyeurism? And how do we view his images of young girls from our modern perspective? Schiele didn't just make groundbreaking art, he was also a new kind of artist, carefully crafting his own myth, pioneering the notion of the artist as personality and performer in a way that would influence generations of other cultural trailblazers. With contributions from Iggy Pop, Lily Cole and Jake Chapman, and visually striking dramatic reconstructions choreographed by acclaimed physical theatre company Gecko, the film conjures up the passionate, provocative world of Egon Schiele.”

- BBC

 
 

Clip from Little Tree Films

 
  • Directed by Teresa Griffiths
    Movement Director: Amit Lahav
    Executive Producer: Richard Bright
    Art Director: Alec Walker
    Director of Photography: Jonathan Partridge
    Editor: Claire Guillon
    Graphics: BDH
    Archive Research: Declan Smith
    Assistant Producer: Isabel Sutton
    Production Manager: Mandy Weller
    Production Co-ordinator: Lucy Roy

    Cast:
    Kenneth Cranham, Sonya Cullingford, Laura Evelyn, Ruth Gemmell and Henry McGrath

  • ★★★★★ Financial Times “Interspersed dramatised episodes are not unusual in this kind of documentary but here they have an extra, thrilling dimension… Quasi-balletic interludes also fit the artist’s vision of forceful movement capturing extreme emotional states.”

    Radio Times Critic’s Pick 
    Winner of Royal Television Society Award for Best Editing
    Nominated for Royal Television Society Scotland Best Arts Documentary award