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Callas Forever | 
| Director: Franco Zeffirelli Actors: Fanny Ardant, Justino Diaz, Jeremy Irons, Joan Plowright, Manuel De Blas Studio: Image Entertainment Category: DVD
List Price: CDN$ 29.99 Buy New: CDN$ 8.93 You Save: CDN$ 21.06 (70%)
New (15) Used (7) from CDN$ 8.79
Avg. Customer Rating: 1 reviews Sales Rank: 5365
Format: Dolby, Ntsc, Widescreen Languages: English (Original Language), French (Original Language), Italian (Original Language) Aspect Ratio: 1.78:1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2 Dimensions (in): 7.1 x 5.4 x 0.6
MPN: 0349 UPC: 014381034929 EAN: 0014381034929 ASIN: B00092ZKZ4
Theatrical Release Date: 2002 Release Date: June 28, 2005 Availability: Usually ships within 1 - 2 business days Shipping: Expedited shipping available Shipping: International shipping available Condition: ******BRAND NEW****SHIPS WITHIN 24 HRS DIRECTLY FROM CANADA USING CANADA POST, NO DUTY FEES TO BE PAID, WE ARE THE SOURCE FOR MOVIES, GAMES AND MUSIC~~~~
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| Editorial Reviews:
From Amazon.com 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
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| Customer Reviews:
Casta diva October 10, 2005 Fanny Ardant is simply masterful as the tempermental Callas in a fanciful retelling of the last few months of her life. Expressing a wide range of emotions, as well as dancing and lip-synching to actual recordings of Callas' voice, prove that she is both talented and versatile. The film was powerful and eloquently protrayed a woman torn between the allure of reviving her fallen fame and holding on to the artistic integrity she felt for her art. I was very moved by this film and became further intrigued by this facsinating woman who becasme "the voice of the century".
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