 |
|
MOVIE REVIEW
'Callas Forever'
Franco Zeffirelli gets to honor his old friend in this aria to a
diva.
By Kevin Thomas
Times Staff Writer
Nov 5 2004
Franco Zeffirelli gets to honor his old friend in 'Callas Forever.' It
took director Franco Zeffirelli a quarter of a century to figure out
how best to pay homage on screen to his longtime friend and colleague,
opera legend Maria Callas, who died at 53 in 1977. It was worth the
wait, for with "Callas Forever" he and playwright Martin Sherman have
come up with an inspired way to make fiction suggest what Callas the
woman was like. Casting the elegant and witty Fanny Ardant as Callas
was also inspired. The result is not only one of Zeffirelli's sumptuous
productions but also a film that celebrates the sacredness of artistic
integrity that to Zeffirelli Callas embodied fully.
By 1977, the year Callas died, she had not only lost her singing voice
but also her great love, Aristotle Onassis, first to Jacqueline Kennedy
and then to the finality of his 1975 death. But Zeffirelli imagines for
her a reprieve, one that allows him to depict the woman he knew and
loved and in effect to direct her in a movie, which in reality he never
did.
Zeffirelli's alter ego is the fictional Larry Kelly (Jeremy Irons), a
British impresario who has just arrived in Paris sometime in 1977 for
the performance of one of his rock bands. He had also presented Callas
in her faltering final concert performances and had formed with her a
loving, if inevitably tempestuous, friendship.
On hand to cover his band is peripatetic British entertainment
columnist Sarah Keller (Joan Plowright), tart and plain-spoken, but a
staunch friend to both Callas and Kelly.
It is Sarah who shames Kelly into brooking Callas' mercurial
temperament to rescue her from her ornate Paris apartment, where she
pops pills and listens to her recordings, tormenting herself with the
loss of her voice — and also of Onassis. Kelly has come up with the
idea of producing a film version of "Carmen" in which Callas would
lip-sync to a recording she had made some 20 years earlier.
At this point it is important to cite that "Callas Forever" possesses
an astringent, all-important sense of self-awareness that saves it from
sliding into camp. Kelly and Sarah banter about how she may be "a
little long in the tooth" to be covering a rock concert — and how in
middle age he may be a tad too old for a ponytail. Once Kelly manages
to break through Callas' self-destructive misery and overcome her sense
of how bizarre his proposal is, she wonders if, though still beautiful,
she can portray Bizet's fiery heroine. This self-awareness on the part
of Callas, Kelly and Sarah is crucial to the film's honest expression
of Zeffirelli's gay sensibility. It attests to how gay men seem
especially adept at handling divas.
The film-within-the-film that becomes the "Carmen" that Zeffirelli
would have loved to make with Callas is as bravura as his "La
Traviata." Ardant's Callas is gorgeous, the lip-syncing flawless.
Since Callas had never performed "Carmen" on stage, she is energized by
making the film and is renewed by the creative process. But once the
shooting is over, "Callas Forever" gets to its core, and this is where
Ardant comes fully into her own in her portrayal of a great artist. How
Ardant's Callas faces up to this predicament reveals all that
Zeffirelli so steadfastly cherishes about her. Still, it is lamentable
that, either by fate or intention, Callas did not attempt a second
career as a dramatic actress.
There is perhaps somewhere an actress, most likely someone of Callas'
Greek heritage, who resembles the diva physically more closely than
Fanny Ardant does. But Ardant is a boldly striking beauty with a
commanding star charisma. As an actress she has delved so deeply within
herself that she doesn't have to resemble Callas closely because she
has become her from frame one.
'Callas Forever'
MPAA rating: Unrated
Times guidelines: Mature themes
Fanny Ardant...Maria Callas
Jeremy Irons...Larry Kelly
Joan Plowright...Sarah Kellar
Jay Rodan...Michael
Gabriel Garko...Marco/Don José
A Regent Releasing/here! Films presentation. Director Franco
Zeffirelli. Producers Riccardo Tozzi, Giovannella Zannoni. Executive
producers Marco Chimenz, Giovanni Stabilini. Screenplay Martin Sherman
and Zeffirelli. Cinematographer Ennio Guarnieri. Editor Sean Barton.
Music Alessio Vlad. Costumes Anna Anni, Karl Lagerfeld for Fanny
Ardant's Chanel gowns. Alessandro Lai, Alberto Spiazzi. Art director
Bruno Cesari. Production designer for "Carmen" Carol Centolavigna. Set
decorator Maurizia Narducci. Running time: 1 hour, 48 minutes. At
selected theaters.
|
Copyright 2004 Los Angeles Times
|
<