One of the most famous Japanese writers in the world and a group whose songs people know by heart meet on the same stage. The dance performance "Another World" was inspired both by dispatches, which have been organizing headline concerts around the world for forty-three years, and by Haruki Murakami's novel "Relentless Wonderland and the End of the World" a decade younger.The show is an etude born from the symbols, philosophy and imagery of Depeche Mode's music. Her energy provokes movement and draws dancers into a world of lights, lasers and video projections. Dancers become genderless mechanical beings immersed in mutated dreams and synthetic senses. The characters they create make sense of the unknown layers of the subconscious: the play predicts the future, towards which the majority of humanity moves without realizing it. In the futurism-saturated dance performance "The Other World", there is no room left for real feelings and perception of reality. The synthetics that pervade the environment force us to communicate, laugh, rage, and even procreate out of duty, regardless of our natural human nature. It's a world where you can hardly tell a man from a woman - people are united by the pressure of false life and false feelings, which have penetrated and become an integral part of stagnant bodies. One can only dream about a real, true, free, natural state, as the text of one of Depeche Mode's songs says: "Dream on... Dream on..."."Our aim is to show what the audience doesn't expect to see. "Despatch", Murakami, ballet, lasers - it's an incredible combination. Indeed, those who like the classics - ballet, rarely like popular music - "despatches", or vice versa. And here, in the performance "The Other World", an audience of different interests and tastes comes together, and this is the biggest success of this performance".