This site has limited support for your browser. We recommend switching to Edge, Chrome, Safari, or Firefox.

Location, Location, Location

It was perhaps on Instagram some five or six years ago when I first came across the dance films of Benjamin Seroussi. I was immediately drawn in by his films, and the distinctive and somewhat eccentric piano scores of Koki Nakano with whom he regularly collaborates. And then there is the fact that choreographer Damien Jalet has been a frequent collaborator of Seroussi as well. In discovering more of Seroussi’s works, I found they feature unique locations where the dance is truly integrated. 

Still from Benjamin Seroussi's “Glances.”

Released four years ago now, Glances, is a gorgeous, spacious, and quite literally moving example of such a dance film—which is actually also a music video. In fact, like Tess Voelker former dancer with Nederlands Dans Theater, the dancer and choreographer featured—the camera never stops. And what is revealed is a film that is at once subtle and stunning, wherein camera, site, and dance work meld together beautifully to create a truly visceral viewing experience.

Glances opens with the camera gently descending over a riverscape, where we see a seemingly sunken, empty, and open path extending into the distance. Under a gray and foggy sky, a dark blur suggests trees. In the next shot, the camera descends to find dancer Tess Voelker in a deep red and purple unitard—the only visible, albeit muted color. She seems to be walking curiously, as if—like we the viewers—she is seeing this place for the first time. Voelker becomes playful, almost pedestrian and nonchalant, and while her dance feels improvised, her technique, control, line, and instinct show an unmistakable professionalism. 

Still from Benjamin Seroussi's “Glances.”

Still from Benjamin Seroussi's “Glances.”

The film cuts between the river path and a geometric location of curved black and red colored walls with concentric circular, window like openings. Voelker invites us to explore it with her, and unlike the sunken river path, this is a site of no clear proportions. Voelker makes the dance personal—she is Alice in Wonderland, fallen through the rabbit hole. With the camera following and sometimes leading the way, she takes us with her, improvising elegantly, sneaking around corners, under angular shaped ceiling cut outs, led by a sense of playful innocence matched by Nakano’s beautiful score.

Whether seen live or on film, dance works that are truly site-specific interact with, move through, and employ dance to investigate space and site, rather than simply use them as a background. In Glances the marriage of Nakano’s gentle and lovely score, Seroussi’s swooping and often surreal, yet masterly camera work, the incredible locations and elegance of Voelker’s dance feel like a dream. A lovely, albeit brief vacation, wherein we take a deep dive into a misty, fairy tale of real world beauty. Enjoy.

Sarah Elgart


Sarah Elgart is an award winning choreographer, director, movement director, and producer, creating original content for stage, site and screen, whose work has been seen internationally. Sarah’s ScreenDance Diaries is one of the first articles on the genre of Dance Film (originally for Cultural Daily). An alumna of the Sundance Institute’s Dance/Film Lab, AFI’s DWW, and a director member of the DGA, Sarah is Founder/Director of Dare to Dance in Public Film Festival. 

subscribe to continue reading


“Uncommonly intelligent, substantial coverage.”

Your weekly source for world-class dance reviews, interviews, articles, and more.

Already a paid subscriber? Login

comments

Please note, comments must be approved before they are published

Blog posts

Bespoke Cinderella
REVIEWS | Steve Sucato

Bespoke Cinderella

Cleveland Ballet's new “Cinderella,” choreographed by artistic director Timour Bourtasenkov, was the culmination of the company's steady growth in size, quality, and stature since its founding in 2014.

Continue Reading
Imaginary Seatmate
MEMOIR | Michael Quinn

Imaginary Seatmate

At the memorial for Joan Acocella, held at the New York Public Library for the Performing Arts, in the fall of 2025, I was drawn to the only red chair in the auditorium.

Continue Reading
The Rest is Silence
REVIEWS | Eoin Fenton

The Rest is Silence

“Hamlet” for many brings about fear. Not for its ghosts or its bloody end, but rather nightmarish memories of English classes where Shakespeare’s longest play was the source of ire for students across the English-speaking world.

Continue Reading
Good Subscription Agency