Live Arts Miami presents ‘Morning/Mourning’ by Gelsey Bell, a South Florida premiere on Oct. 17-19, that takes audiences 1.6 ...
Duration has been around 3.0 years since 2021. The Ave Maria Bond moniker notwithstanding, the portfolio's long-standing nearly 20% equity allocation rightly puts it in the conservative-allocation ...
The movie starts off with Callas in black-and-white close-up singing “Ave Maria” from Verdi’s opera “Otello.” She’s clearly singing, as her face muscles and breathing demonstrate.
Following Spencer and Jackie — biopic melodramas about Princess Diana and First Lady Jacqueline Kennedy — Chilean director Pablo Larraín rounds out his informal trilogy with Maria ...
After a Venice world premiere, FilmNation has sold the Maria Callas biopic across Europe after Netflix picked up the U.S. rights. By Etan Vlessing Canada Bureau Chief Following its debut on the ...
Larraín's third inside portrait of a 20th-century female icon feels more limited than "Jackie" or "Spencer," because it's more hemmed in by fate. “Maria,” Pablo Larraín’s drama about the ...
Lachman, who was Oscar-nominated for his breathtaking chiaroscuro work on Larraín’s last feature, El Conde, shot Maria using a textured mix of 35mm, 16mm and Super 8mm, along with vintage lenses.
FilmNation Entertainment has sold key international territories on Pablo Larraín‘s “Maria,” starring Angelina Jolie, which had its world premiere in the main competition section of the ...
I’d imagine that most audience members will walk into Maria with fewer preconceived notions, less readiness to fill in the gaps in Larraín’s portraiture. His particular trick proves less ...
Pablo Larraín’s Angelina Jolie-starring Maria was met with a 10-minute ovation following its Venice Film Festival world premiere Thursday night. The biopic of legendary opera singer Maria ...
Her starring role in Maria is her most ambitious in ages, and yet it doesn’t feel like a reemergence. It feels like a snooze. Photo: Vision Distribution All three of these Larraín films play ...
Based on the history of director Pablo Larraín's leading ladies and the rapturous response to "Maria" at Venice, Angelina Jolie seems Oscars bound. But will any of her colleagues join her?