Without passion and motivation, Billy is always forced to spend extra time to make calls throughout the day in order to improve basic skills as boxing class grades are not good. This failure brought a great blow to Confidence's confidence and his ability was very low. In addition, Billy and the coach have some problems but he is not only an aggressive person who is strict and normative practicing, but also shouting and shouting.
In 11th year old Billy Elliott from Edinburgh in England, Derlam, England, he liked dancing and wanted to be a professional ballerina in 1984. Billy is his widow 's father Jackie and his brother Tony, both of whom are storm coal workers (the latter are trade union bullys) and his grandmother who is suffering from Alzheimer' s disease and wants to become a professional dancer I live in. It is a person. Billy's father sent him to the gym to learn boxing, but Billy did not like sports. He happens to use the ballet class in the gym and their normal underground studio is temporarily used as a soup kitchen for strike minor. Billy did not know, Billy joined the ballet class. When Jackie discovered this, he banned Billy from taking another ballet. But due to enthusiasm for dancing, Billy secretly continued teaching with the help of his dance teacher Sandra Wilkinson.
Billy Elliot is a British dance drama in 2000, surrounding men's becoming professional ballerinas. It is located in the northeast of England during the strike of coal miners in 1984-85. Stephen Warbeck's music produced by Bregg Bremen and John Finn, BBC Film, Tiger Aspect Pictures, Working Title Film, is a universal studio and a focus written by Lee Hall, supervised by Stephen Dardriy · Close-up announced. In the movie, Jamie Bell plays an ambitious dancer dealing with 11-year old Billy, a male ballerina negative stereotype, Gary Lewis plays his coal miner, and Jamie Dragin plays billy. Bullying brothers, Julie Walters are playing his ballet teacher. This movie was released on 29th September 2000 by Universal Pictures and Focus Films. It received a positive comment from the critics and received 72, 853, 509 pounds with a £ 3 million budget. In 2001, writer Melvin Burgess was asked to write a novel based on Lee Hall's script.