#leonard carey
Explore tagged Tumblr posts
letterboxd-loggd · 4 months ago
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
Heaven Can Wait (1943) Ernst Lubitsch
August 9th 2024
0 notes
milliondollarbaby87 · 2 years ago
Text
Suspicion (1941) Review
When handsome playboy Johnnie Aysgarth meets Lina McLaidlaw on a train in England and they take a walk together. After hearing her parents claim she will never marry this pushes her further into this relationship and marriage! ⭐️⭐️⭐️ (more…)
Tumblr media
View On WordPress
0 notes
admireforever · 11 months ago
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media
Maestro
241 notes · View notes
manicpixiedepressedwitch · 1 year ago
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media
72 notes · View notes
fangerine · 10 months ago
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
"All anyone needs is to be sensitive to each other."
MAESTRO (2023) dir. Bradley Cooper
20 notes · View notes
you-belong-among-wildflowers · 10 months ago
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
Films Watched in 2024 [1/?]
↳ "I have one or two saving factors. One is it that I love people, and I love music. I love music so much it keeps me glued to life even when I’m most depressed. And I can get very deeply depressed. But I have a work ethic and that keeps me afloat. And the other is that I love people so much that it’s hard for me to be alone."
- Maestro (d. Bradley Cooper, 2023
19 notes · View notes
justanothercinemaniac · 11 months ago
Text
I don’t see people talking about the whitewashing in Maestro so I will.
Maestro is a movie about Leonard Bernstein, an iconic film composer who was also Jewish. It’s been criticized for casting Bradley Cooper (who is not Jewish) as Bernstein and wearing a fake nose to play the part (which some have referred to as “jew-face”). Bradley Cooper also directs the movie, but there’s been a lot of discussion about him. I’m here to talk about Carey Mulligan.
Felicia Montealegre was a Latina actress (Costa Rican) who married Leonard Bernstein. But instead of casting a Latina actress to play a real life Latina, they cast Carey Mulligan. AND NO ONE IS TALKING ABOUT IT.
I don’t know what else to say about this except what the hell? What year is it? Are we still doing this? You have a million incredibly talented Latinas in Hollywood, but you decide to whitewash a real life film icon instead??? And instead of talking about how shitty that is, you reward that racism with praise and a Golden Globe nomination? Why are we still doing this in 2023???????
Not to mention the real Montealegre was only 4 years younger than Bernstein but Mulligan is 10 years younger than Bradley Cooper, continuing the misogynistic/ageist Hollywood trend seen in Oppenheimer and Napoleon of portraying real life women as way younger than they really were.
Anyways, representation matters, latine representation matters, and fuck whitewashing.
26 notes · View notes
waitmyturtles · 11 months ago
Text
As this film will be getting much more coverage during awards season, I thought that this analysis and reflection of Leonard Bernstein's queer sexuality, and how it was rendered in the film, was worth reading.
Certain emphases in the article below are mine. As an East-Coast American, in many ways, I feel like Leonard Bernstein is musical family; that a Hollywood-driven film about him would leave out important details of the context of his sexual and emotional life is... to be expected in the Hollywood West.
****
The film celebrates Leonard Bernstein’s musical duality, but fails to seriously engage with his bisexuality.
By Jennie Livingston
There’s a heartbreaking scene in Bradley Cooper’s “Maestro,” about the marriage of the composer and conductor Leonard Bernstein (Cooper) to the actress Felicia Montealegre (Carey Mulligan), in which, as the couple argue in the bedroom of their Upper West Side apartment, Macy’s parade inflatables glide past the windows. A giant Snoopy echoes a Snoopy we saw in a family scene; it also gestures at the awkward gulf between Bernstein’s private and public lives, as if the musician himself were yet another helium-propelled icon from the Thanksgiving pantheon. Montealegre’s accusation, “Your truth is a [expletive] lie!” nails Bernstein’s privilege, condemning the habits and appetites he expects his family to tolerate and support.
The film gets right so much of who Bernstein was, allowing us to take in how he was, all at once, ahead of his time, a victim of his time, a gay man, a bisexual, a father, a nonconformist, a narcissist. “Maestro” is full of heart and craft, with riveting lead performances. It’s a film about a musician that doesn’t exaggerate or glorify the creative process, or suggest artists are either superhuman or subhuman.
The film drops you into the heart of creation so that you feel the excitement of the new, particularly in eras (the 1940s through the ’70s) in which Leonard Bernstein revolutionized how the public experienced classical music. As the decades shift, so does what we see: Early scenes use an aspect ratio (4:3) and color world (black and white) from the ’40s; then the film almost imperceptibly brings in color, before finally stretching the frame out to widescreen — all without banging you over the head with its cinematic cleverness. The cinematographer, Matthew Libatique, deserves special applause for his command of light, space and movement. An opening scene in which the young Bernstein leaps onto a bed, slaps his partner’s butt like a timpani, then runs right into Carnegie Hall in his bathrobe and boxers, is as thrilling as any time-compression or dream sequence I can name.
Although it’s clear that Cooper’s directorial hand is nothing less than breathtaking, the film becomes increasingly disquieting. In the first third of the film, the script sets up an intoxicating premise: a queer Jewish man inhabiting the already-antisemitic world of classical music falls in love with a woman. It can happen. It particularly could happen in a world in which gay artists were always in danger of being exposed and ejected from the institutions they depended on. In the ’40s and ’50s, when Bernstein and Montealegre met and married, psychiatry still considered homosexuality a disorder to be treated or cured. (A note on my language describing Bernstein’s sexuality: In an early letter, Montealegre tells Bernstein “you are a homosexual and may never change.” More recently, his daughter Jamie has referred to him alternately as gay and bisexual.)
Early on, the script follows Bernstein from dating the clarinetist David Oppenheim (the man in bed in that opening scene, played by Matt Bomer) to his courtship with Montealegre, an actress with high cheekbones and an intelligence and warmth that are just as sharply defined. One day Lenny’s walking alone in Central Park and runs into Oppenheim, who’s strolling with his wife, Ellen Adler (Kate Eastman), and baby in tow. By now Bernstein’s also married. Addressing the child, Bernstein jokes that he has slept with both of her parents! And adds with a kind of wild glee, “but I’m reining it in.” The mother and child go one way; Bernstein and Oppenheim head downtown. Soon Oppenheim is clasping Bernstein’s face, and they are both feeling, regretting, reliving what couldn’t have been.
If only the film itself weren’t an exercise in “reining in” Bernstein’s sexuality. Granted, the movie primarily concerns the relationship between Montealegre and Bernstein. It’s about two people creating a family, a family that has issues, partly because the wife spends years tolerating, resisting, commenting on, accepting and suffering from her husband’s dualities. But about a third of the way in, the queer characters all but fade out. They’re there as a light visual presence, but not as people with stories and interior lives.
After Oppenheim and Bernstein’s intimate stroll, Lenny and his lovers are reduced (in Montealegre’s eyes) to a series of obstacles to respectability, and (in the audience’s eyes) to a series of outfits, mannerisms and even clichés, like a coke-fueled party during which Bernstein talks on the phone to his daughter Jamie. Did some gay men in the ’70s skate on the surface of drugs and anonymous sex? Yes, and if the film tells me Bernstein was there to witness and experience it, I believe it. What I don’t believe is that he never experienced relationships with men built on conversation, intellectual intimacies and sustained physical contact. It wouldn’t have taken much — one or two scenes — to suggest that the gay relationships that Bernstein cultivated were in fact love affairs. That may have been worth noting, including in the service of telling the story of the marriage.
“Heterosexuals have never known what to do with queer people, if they think of their existence at all,” Carmen Maria Machado writes, in a memoir tracing the invisibility of certain narratives. I don’t want to believe that the director and his co-writer are incapable of writing well-rounded gay characters, but paradoxically, the failure to render Bernstein’s male lovers as three-dimensional people distracts from the central couple’s romance. I longed for more insight into the nuances of Bernstein and Montealegre’s conundrum, and details of his queer life could have provided it. Flattening Bernstein’s gay relationships to a series of knowing glances and brief encounters seemed to underline the main couple’s essential heterosexuality, rather than emphasizing their relationship’s complexity.
Because, in life, Bernstein kept seeing men — and not only at the events the film allows us to briefly glimpse. Ultimately, he left Montealegre for a younger man, Tom Cothran (Gideon Glick), who worked in classical radio. If included, this risky decision could have been a great turning point in the film. Scenes of Bernstein attending the dying Montealegre are moving; they could have been more meaningful if we had understood the drama and sacrifice behind his loving presence at her bedside. He didn’t just drop out of one or two coke-fueled soirees; he left a relationship.
The film ends with Montealegre’s death and suggests Bernstein never recovered from the loss. In life, after his wife’s death, Bernstein reconnected with Cothran, as a friend. Soon after, Cothran himself died, of AIDS, the plague that claimed the lives of so many men of his and Bernstein’s generations. It must have been a cavalcade of griefs for Bernstein; it must have been so complex for this artist to have struggled — with his desire to honor his desires, with his realization that the world was becoming increasingly open to “out” queer artists as viable public figures — and with the divisions between his queer worlds and his family. I wonder if Bernstein longed for Montealegre more acutely in the 1980s. Perhaps, together, they could have absorbed the horror of the AIDS pandemic.
The decision to leave out AIDS feels as if the filmmakers simply don’t know, or mark as significant, what happened in the world during the years between Montealegre’s death in 1978 and Bernstein’s own death in 1990. What viewers get instead is a near-final sequence of Bernstein grinding with his young conducting student to Tears for Fears’s “Shout,” then wildly dancing on his own. That these flashes of ecstasy occur in a room full of other young men, many of whom will die soon, is an odd understatement from a film obsessed with the passage of time.
Jennie Livingston directed and produced the award-winning documentary “Paris Is Burning,” and the shorts “Who’s the Top?” “Through the Ice” and “Hotheads.” Other work includes directing for the TV series “Pose” and creating an original projection for Elton John’s show. Livingston is currently at work on a nonfiction feature film, “Earth Camp One.”
15 notes · View notes
sparklygraves · 11 months ago
Text
I just watched this movie where this guy is having a conversation with his daughter who's anxious over some gay rumours she's heard about him.
He wants to tell her that yes, the rumours are true. And yes, his marriage with her mom is in trouble. But no, the gayness is not in itself bad.
Being gay or bi or whatever is just a fact of being, not a good or bad thing.
But he tells her something else instead-- that those rumour-mongerers are just jealous and to not worry about it. He's dealt with this shit all his life and it'll pass. He'll rise above it.
And she sighs with relief and thanks him.
And that's the point where he looks the most hurt. Like he just realizes then he has done both him and his daughter a terrible disservice. He's pushed her away from himself-- and potentially from herself too, if she's queer (and she's played by Maya Hawke, so there are queer vibes).
And he's just buried this very alive part of himself and marked it with his silence as a shameful thing.
And this is a proud man who shame does not come naturally to. He revels in his artistic gifts, his sexuality, his charismatic personality.
Seeing a man like that hide in that scene just really messed me up.
I paused the movie and turned to my mom and tried to share what I was feeling and she didn't understand at all. "But he didn't tell her," she said.
"But he wanted to," I said.
13 notes · View notes
alyensmemoir · 9 months ago
Text
Tumblr media
Maestro (2023)
6 notes · View notes
deadpresidents · 11 months ago
Text
I'd like to think that I'm at least a grown-up even if I'm not the most sophisticated adult when it comes to art and film, but I watched Maestro last night and found most of the performances to be so unintentionally funny that I actually started to feel bad. If I had seen it in the theater with a date, I definitely would have gotten in trouble for laughing at inappropriate moments. Don't get me wrong: everyone works really hard and I understand that they were playing larger-than-life characters who lived complicated lives, but man, there were some points where it felt like an SNL skit that was cut for time.
9 notes · View notes
three-red-horns · 11 months ago
Text
"You don't even know how much you need me, do you?"
From Maestro
6 notes · View notes
comediesmusicales · 1 year ago
Text
youtube
Official teaser for the Leonard Bernstein Netflix biopic.
14 notes · View notes
admireforever · 21 days ago
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media
Maestro
8 notes · View notes
daniel-on-film · 1 year ago
Text
youtube
"If summer doesn't sing in you, then nothing sings in you. And if nothing sings in you, then you can't make music." Maestro graces theaters Nov. 22.
7 notes · View notes
submersivemedia · 1 year ago
Text
Tumblr media
Imagine getting to direct an actor who needs no notes.
6 notes · View notes