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DVD Callas Forever
Franco Zeffirelli was and is clearly in love with Maria Callas, but unlike the average Callas fan, as a movie director, he was able to do something about it. This superbly made film, about the last few months of the great soprano's life in 1977, moves easily between fact and fantasy to express that love and to give her a more upbeat ending than the one that fate actually dealt her. It is made with the attention to small details that is a hallmark of Zeffirelli's work.
In reality, Callas became a recluse in her luxurious Paris apartment, mourning the loss of her voice, the breakup of her relationship to Aristotle Onassis and the disintegration of her career. Her final days were a nightmare. But Zeffirelli uses his imagination to rewrite that unhappy ending. He invents a rock producer, Tom Kelly (Jeremy Irons) who clearly is a Zeffirelli figure (the names rhyme). Kelly used to be her manager and has a scheme to revive her career in movies: he will film her greatest roles, using her recordings as soundtracks; she will go through the motions and lip-synch the words. It might have worked; experiments with Carmen, which she recorded but never sang onstage, were certainly promising. But Callas turned down the plan, on grounds of artistic integrity.
But in fact, Zeffirelli does make it work in this movie. Fanny Ardant does a marvelous job as Callas, not only shaping the words of her various arias (digitized and sounding better than ever) but also using facial expressions that speak as eloquently as words. Here is Callas reborn, with all her temperament, anguish and pride. Raw emotions are unleashed, particularly in a production of Tosca, when she stabs the villainous Scarpia (Justino Diaz) shouting savagely "muori dannato, muori, muori, muori" ("die , damn you, die, die die") She is avenging all the insults and disappointments of her life; Ardant becomes Callas in such moments. --Joe McLellan
Understandably, Franco Zeffirelli loved this woman, and wanted to show this affection on the screen. But the picture doesn't match the person.
Maria Callas was a drawn, bitter woman at the end of her life, with a severe addiction to medications that would have made the premise of the film impossible. She is shown as a beautiful woman, and a caring woman, with a strong accent when she spoke English . . . Maria Callas was born in America and had no such accent, which took away from the fealty of the character.
I would rather remember Callas as I saw her and heard her and read about her during her lifetime . . that is satisfaction enough for my memory of her. This picture would have been better as a biopic than as the practically complete fiction that it is.
CALLAS MEMORIES
There are two excellent things about this movie: Fanny Ardant as Maria and the remastered recordings of the Callas arias. The director obviously chose the ones showing the voice at its prime.
There are also two bad thngs about this movie: The gay life of the character that Jeremy Irons plays (why was it necessary?) and the Joan Plowright roll. What was that all about?
It's obvious that Franco Zeffirelli had a deep love and respect for Maria Callas. It shows in every frame. He was lucky to have gained her confidence and friendship. I had a memorable, but brief encounter with Callas on her ill fated tour with di Stefano. After the San Francisco recital, she gave me an autographed picture which I shall treasure all my life. There was hardly anyone in the opera house for her appearance.
This DVD is worth watchng. I only wish Zeffirelli had gone deeper into Callas the woman and Callas the singer. It left me wanting more!
Captures the Emotions not the Life of Callas.
There is not a whole a lot to be said about this film since it's brief, low-key, overly-conversational, and not biographical enough to provide the viewers a vision of how the Diva of the century rose to the top and became depressed and lost her passion for singing in her later years. Fanny Ardant gave a convincing performance of Callas, but it's unfortunate the role is limited to doing some lipsynching and display of the Diva's temperaments. Callas still hasn't come to terms of with her last "shameful" performance in Japan before going into a near 20 year hibernation mode, and resisted the outside world including her loyal gay manager played Jeremy Iron. She thinks her career is over while he relentlessly tried to revive her and convince her to make her comeback by making an opera film named Carmen which would not used her current singing voice but would dubb it with her singing from her early works. Well, things didn't quite turn out the way everyone wanted, and certainly the Diva didn't want to fool the world with Carmen, and demanded to have the film destroyed...
While the performances from both Iron and Ardant are touching and funny at times, the film is still rather dull even for if it's made for TV. The set design and costumes were quite an eye-candy. several of her Callas greatest hits were used in this film. Joan Plowright is unerused as the self-proclaimed "vampire" publicist. It could've been a very powerful and inspirational experience if the film had explore the overall lifetimes of Callas and not just one chapter. I am left unsatisfied by the lack of knowledge and music provided by Callas Forever.
Annette Bening's outstanding performance is the best reason to see Being Julia, a highly melodramatic adaptation of the 1937 novel Theatre by W. Somerset Maugham. With a prestigious pedigree (director Istvan Szabo and screenwriter Ronald Harwood share impressive theatrical backgrounds) and a stellar cast including Jeremy Irons, Bruce Greenwood, and Juliet Stevenson, the film's backstage and onstage theatrics take place in pre-World War II London, when the venerable actress Julia (Bening) fends off middle-age by romancing a stage-struck young American (Shaun Evans) in a calculated attempt to retain some youthful vitality while airing her own dirty laundry onstage in a glorious act of divine diva behavior. Treating life and theater as one big play in which she's the perpetual... More Info about this DVD Actor(s): Michael Gambon - Annette Bening - Jeremy Irons Director(s): István Szabó DVD Release Date: Released the 22 March 2005 Usually ships in 24 hours
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Rarely has The Merchant of Venice, one of Shakespeare's most complex plays, looked as ravishingly sumptuous as in this adaptation, directed by Michael Radford (Il Postino). In a decadent version of renaissance Venice, a young nobleman named Bassanio (Joseph Fiennes, Shakespeare in Love) seeks to woo the lovely Portia (newcomer Lynn Collins), but lacks the money to travel to her estate. He seeks support from his friend, the merchant Antonio (Jeremy Irons, Reversal of Fortune); Antonio's fortune is tied up in sea ventures, so the merchant offers to borrow money from a Jewish moneylender, Shylock (Al Pacino, Dog Day Afternoon). But Shylock holds a grudge against Antonio, who has routinely treated the Jew with contempt, and demands that if the debt is not... More Info about this DVD Actor(s): Al Pacino - Jeremy Irons - Joseph Fiennes - Lynn Collins Director(s): Michael Radford DVD Release Date: Released the 10 May 2005 Usually ships in 24 hours
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Writer/director Pedro Almodóvar's dark, sexy Hitchcock homage is his best work since his Oscar-winning All About My Mother, and deepened by a sun-dappled sadness. Handsome, enigmatic Ángel (Gael García Bernal) arrives at the Spanish movie offices of director Enrique Goded (Fele Martinez) and happily proclaims that he's actually Enrique's long-lost school chum Ignacio--an announcement that is both less than convincing and more than it seems. A novice actor, Ángel pitches a semi-autobiographical screenplay in which he's determined to star, a revenge-laden reflection of the doomed love he and Enrique shared as boys before a pedophile priest cruelly intervened. The script, and the lost days it recalls, carefully unfurls into a series of brooding movies-within-movies... More Info about this DVD Actor(s): Gael García Bernal - Fele Martínez - Javier Cámara Director(s): Pedro Almodóvar DVD Release Date: Released the 12 April 2005 Usually ships in 24 hours
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It's astonishing that one man could have written so many memorable songs, but musical gems keep popping up in De-Lovely, about the life and loves of Cole Porter. Played by Kevin Kline (In & Out, A Fish Called Wanda), an elderly Porter is summoned by a mysterious director (Jonathan Pryce, Brazil) to view his own story, which unfolds as a series of theatrical tableaux. The movie is open (if a bit chaste) about Porter's homosexuality, but argues that the love of his life was still his devoted platonic relationship with Linda Lee (Ashley Judd, Ruby in Paradise, Kiss the Girls). Unfortunately, the narrative suffers from the fate of many biographies; by trying to cram in a person's entire life, it ends up a collection of snapshots without depth or... More Info about this DVD Actor(s): Kevin Kline - Ashley Judd - Jonathan Pryce Director(s): Irwin Winkler DVD Release Date: Released the 21 December 2004 Usually ships in 24 hours
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