Farinelli (1995)
Facts
| Directed by | Gérard Corbiau |
| Cast | Stefano Dionisi, Enrico Lo Verso, Elsa Zylberstein, Jeroen Krabbé, Caroline Cellier, Omero Antonutti, Marianne Basler and Delphine Zentout |
| Theatrical Release | March 17, 1995 |
| DVD Release | August 22, 2000 |
| Running Time | 110 minutes |
| MPAA Rating | R (Restricted) |
| UPC Code | 043396106291 |
| Buy this item | $22.49 at Amazon.com As of Jan 5 8:24 EST (details) 1 DVD, Sony, Usually ships in 24 hours, Closed-captioned, Color, DVD-Video, Full Screen, Subtitled, Widescreen, NTSC Languages: French (Original Language - Dolby Digital 2.0), Italian (Original Language - Dolby Digital 2.0), English (Subtitled), Spanish (Subtitled) Or 40 new from $18.99, 11 used from $14.00, 1 collectible from $24.99 |
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User Reviews
Average user review:| Magnificent story |
| Historically inaccurate |
| Sex and Opera |
| Beautiful But Silly |
| Unique but Flawed |
My being a true music lover and also knowledgable about Baroque belle canto, I'm most disappointed in the voices used. The Sony techs knew how to electronically meld the voices of a countertenor and a female soprano, but obviously they knew little about the belle canto sound, regardless of the fact that there were clues in their own script(!), let along first-hand accounts written by knowledgable people of that time. Admittedly in 1994, better trained countertenors were only beginning to appear, so the established, average-voice one chosen may have seemed reasonable to the film makers. In addition, the breathy, warbly, imprecise approach among most female sopranos (along with their distinctly female timbre) had become engrained and accepted by most listeners since the 19th century, so the makers did not sense that this soprano's voice was inappropriate in their attempt to approximate the castrato voice. If they had been more careful in choosing, they should have insisted that supreme soprano Gundula Janowitz participate in the production. And for the countertenor, they should have chosen Andreas Scholl. Regardless of the fact that he was early in his countertenor carreer, he was known for that as well as his earlier experience as a boy soprano.
The other musical disappointment is, to keep the movie length shorter, the arias were truncated to 2/5 their original length or less. This is understandable from a film-maker's view; however, the viewer misses the intent to the Da Capo aria form where the repeated musical theme provides the singer (who in a sense was a "co-composer") with the opportunity to "show his stuff," i.e., his acrobatic vocal skills, high notes, and his musical understanding. The CD soundtrack does have the complete arias and, therefore, is more informative and satisfying.
Since this 1994 film was made, interest among music lovers in Baroque vocal works has expanded greatly with many new productions of operas, oratorios, etc., from Handel, Hasse, Bononcini, Mozart, etc. The Center for the Study of Farinelli has been established in Bologna. Farinelli's remains were discovered in 2006 and are being studied. A new production approached carefully and seriously, well researched, financed, cast, and directed, would be very welcome. March 20, 2007
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