The New York Times by Ben Kenigsberg
The movie is to Callas what last year’s “Jane” was to Jane Goodall: A documentary that revitalizes history through primary sources, to illuminating, at times enthralling effect.
✭ ✭ ✭ ✭ Read critic reviews
France · 2017
Rated PG · 1h 53m
Director Tom Volf
Starring María Callas, Joyce DiDonato
Genre Documentary
Please login to add films to your watchlist.
Told through performances, TV interviews, home movies, family photographs, private letters and unpublished memoirs, the film reveals the essence of an extraordinary woman who rose from humble beginnings in New York City to become a glamorous international superstar and one of the greatest artists of all time.
The New York Times by Ben Kenigsberg
The movie is to Callas what last year’s “Jane” was to Jane Goodall: A documentary that revitalizes history through primary sources, to illuminating, at times enthralling effect.
Entirely composed of archival newsreel footage, performance recordings, and rare interview excerpts from when the great “diva” sat down with journalist David Frost in 1970, the film unfolds like a second-hand sketch of a phantom who continues to haunt its director.
Film Journal International by David Noh
Comprised entirely of the diva’s own words, whether filmed or transcribed from her various writings, letters and reminiscences, the film offers the definitive portrait of a woman who rose from obscurity in her native Queens, NY, born Greek, to become a true citizen of the world and queen of an art form.
The film is less hagiographic than most documentaries of its kind, which isn't to say that Tom Volf's adoration of his subject is ever in doubt.
New York Magazine (Vulture) by Emily Yoshida
Perhaps the greatest gift of Maria by Callas that gives it an advantage over so many recent biographical music documentaries is how willing it is to let its subject just perform, uninterrupted.
Los Angeles Times by Kenneth Turan
While Maria By Callas is short on facts and biographical detail, it expertly presents an emotional essence of this performer, leaving you both shaken and stirred by the extent of her gifts and the way they connected to both audiences and her tumultuous life.
Assembled by first-time French director and Callas devotee Thomas Volf, this adoring clip reel has both pros and cons.
Rolling Stone by Peter Travers
No narrator, no talking heads feeding you insights, just the lady letting it rip on stage and off. What Volf, a French photographer now working on his third book about the acclaimed soprano, misses in perspective he gains in intimacy. His film fawns shamelessly and fumbles a few salient points, but it’s indisputably up close and personal.
First-time director Tom Volf plainly adores Callas — sometimes to a fault — but his film stands as a necessary corrective to decades of bad press. It’s an unalloyed tribute to her as a musical genius who gave all of herself to the public.
The Hollywood Reporter by Todd McCarthy
What is gratifying about the film is Volf's obvious love for and devotion to Callas, as well as his completist's urge to track down and include every scrap of footage at all relevant to telling her story and documenting her greatness.
A man, thoroughly dissatisfied with his life, finds new meaning when he forms a fight club with soap salesman Tyler Durden.
After witnessing a murder, an American vacationing in Rome becomes the killer’s next target.
A five-year-old Indian boy gets lost on the streets of Calcutta, thousands of kilometers from home.
Four Holocaust survivors dream of making it to America.
Sent to a country she's never known… She must risk everything to break free.
A failed stand-up comedian is driven insane, turning to a life of crime in chaos in Gotham City.
Let the festivities begin.