If you thought Breaking Pointe: Part One pushed the boundaries of ballet’s dark underbelly, brace yourself. Part Two doesn’t just lift the curtain; it tears it down.
Odette doesn’t break her ankle. She breaks her spirit. The film’s second half is a dual narrative. Odette Delacroix becomes a ghost in her own body, watching from the wings as physical therapy fails and the company doctor uses words like “chronic” and “compensation.” Her scenes are shot in cold, clinical blues. Breaking.Pointe.Part.Two..Odette.Delacroix..Elise.Graves
The Red Shoes , Whiplash , Black Swan (but meaner). If you thought Breaking Pointe: Part One pushed
Elise curtsies to an empty house. Odette is carried off, not like a swan, but like a carcass. Final Verdict Breaking Pointe, Part Two is not for the faint of heart. It asks a brutal question: In art, is empathy a weakness? Delacroix represents the dying breed of romantic ballerinas. Graves represents the future—efficient, ruthless, and hollow. She breaks her spirit
One shoe off for the heavy-handed symbolism. But that ending? Brava.
Part Three ( Coda of the Damned ) has already been greenlit. Set your calendars.
While the pacing sags slightly in the middle (the physical therapy scenes drag), the final ten minutes are the most electrifying ballet horror since Black Swan .