Звезда родилась сценарий

Дебютная картина Брэдли Купера успешно борется с «Веномом» за звание самой громкой премьеры месяца. По оценкам зрителей и критиков, попытка Купера снять собственный фильм оказалась очень удачной. Рок-драма о двух музыкантах в исполнении Леди Гаги и самого Брэдли не оставила равнодушными даже очень скептически настроенных киноманов. «Принесите Оскар этой парочке!», - пишут в сети. И мы согласны с этим требованием. 7 неожиданных фактов о том, как создавался самый яркий мюзикл осени.

Дебютная картина Брэдли Купера успешно борется с «Веномом» за звание самой громкой премьеры месяца. По оценкам зрителей и критиков, попытка Купера снять собственный фильм оказалась очень удачной. Рок-драма о двух музыкантах в исполнении Леди Гаги и самого Брэдли не оставила равнодушными даже очень скептически настроенных киноманов. «Принесите Оскар этой парочке!», — пишут в сети. И мы согласны с этим требованием.

7 неожиданных фактов о том, как создавался самый яркий мюзикл осени:

Фото: КиноПоиск

История любви молоденькой певицы-неудачницы и рок-звезды, чья слава постепенно начала уходить в прошлое, не нова. Впервые картина «Звезда родилась» вышла на экраны больше 80 лет назад, в 1937 году. Главную женскую роль тогда сыграла Джанет Гейнор, а ее партнером стал Фредрик Марч. В 1954 появился первый ремейк с Джуди Гарленд, которую мы больше помним по роли Дороти из «Волшебника в стране Оз». А в 1976 звездой фильма стала сама Барбара Стрейзанд. Это была огненная премьера!

Фото: JetSetter

Ремейк 2018 года выглядел бы совсем по-другому, если бы за режиссуру фильма взялся Клинт Иствуд, как предполагалось изначально. Главную роль хотели отдать Бейонсе, а на место Купера претендовали Уилл Смит, Кристиан Бейл и Леонардо ДиКаприо.

Фото: Forum Cinemas

Брэдли пришлось постараться, чтобы достойно выглядеть в кадре. Новый фильм стал для него не только режиссерским, но и музыкальным дебютом. Полтора года актер занимался вокалом с Эдди Веддером и в итоге смог добиться похвальных результатов – все песни своего героя Брэдли исполнил самостоятельно. И как ему удавалось скрывать потрясающий голос на протяжении стольких лет?

Фото: Сплетник

Ради съемок в мюзикле Гаге пришлось кардинально сменить имидж. Никакого блонда, меха и каблуков. Минимум косметики и максимум естественности. Можно представить, как нелегко было любительнице эпатажных нарядов предстать перед миллионами в совершенно другом образе. «Я перекрасилась в блондинку в ту ночь, когда мы закончили съемки. Мне хотелось скорее выбраться из этого образа. Не пересказывая финал картины, могу сказать, что там все очень эмоционально и достаточно трагично. Я хочу выйти из образа своей героини, но, честно говоря, Элли все еще во мне», — рассказала Гага в интервью Элен Дедженерес.

Фото: ART1.ru

По словам Гаги, у нее и ее героини действительно много общего. Например, в одной из сцен Элли говорит: «Почти каждый человек из музыкальной индустрии, с которым я знакома, говорил мне, что мой нос слишком велик, и почему бы мне не исправить это». Точно такая же история случилась с Гагой в начале ее карьеры. «Первое, что мне сказали, когда я начала петь, это то, что мне нужно сделать ринопластику», — рассказала артистка Vanity Fair.

Фото: kinopoisk.ru

Брэдли Купер – ярый противник использования фонограммы в кино. Поэтому все песни были исполнены вживую во время процесса съемок.

Фото: CoolConnections

Фильм получился невероятно трогательным. После завершения показа мюзикла на кинофестивале в Торонто журналисты застали Сэма Эллиота, сыгравшего Бобби, со слезами на глазах. «Каждый раз, когда кто-то начинал петь в этом, я плакал. Я был не готов к такому», — прокомментировал свои эмоции артист в интервью BillBoard.

Уже успели оценить дуэт Гаги и Купера? Не пропустите «Веном», «Кислоту» и «Черного клановца».

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

A Star Is Born
A Star Is Born (1976 film poster).jpg

Theatrical release poster

Directed by Frank Pierson
Screenplay by
  • Frank Pierson
  • John Gregory Dunne
  • Joan Didion
Based on

A Star Is Born
by

  • William A. Wellman
  • Robert Carson
  • Dorothy Parker
  • Alan Campbell
Produced by Jon Peters
Starring
  • Barbra Streisand
  • Kris Kristofferson
  • Gary Busey
  • Paul Mazursky
  • Joanne Linville
  • Oliver Clark
Cinematography Robert Surtees
Edited by Peter Zinner
Music by Roger Kellaway

Production
companies

First Artists
Barwood Films[1]

Distributed by Warner Bros.

Release dates

  • December 18, 1976 (Mann Village Theater)
  • December 19, 1976 (United States)

Running time

142 minutes[1]
Country United States
Language English
Budget $6 million
Box office $80 million[2]

A Star Is Born is a 1976 American musical romantic drama film directed by Frank Pierson, written by Pierson, John Gregory Dunne, and Joan Didion. Starring Barbra Streisand as an unknown singer and Kris Kristofferson as an established rock and roll star who fall in love, only to find her career ascending while his goes into decline. A Star Is Born premiered at the Mann Village Theater on December 18, 1976, with a wide release by Warner Bros. the following day. A huge box office success, grossing $80 million on a $6 million budget in North America, the film became the 2nd highest-grossing that year. Reviews praised its performances and musical score, but criticized the screenplay and runtime. At the 49th Academy Awards, the film won Best Original Song for its love theme «Evergreen».

The film is a remake of the 1937 original with Janet Gaynor and Fredric March, notably adapted in 1954 as a musical starring Judy Garland and James Mason; and subsequently again in 2018 with Lady Gaga and Bradley Cooper.

Plot[edit]

John Norman Howard, a famous and self-destructive singer/songwriter rock star, arrives late for a concert. He is drunk, sings a couple of songs, and walks off stage. John’s driver takes him to a bar where Esther Hoffman is singing. One of John’s fans finds him there and starts a fight. Esther grabs John and helps him escape out a back door.

They go to Esther’s, but she invites him to come back for breakfast. Over breakfast (pepperoni pizza), she agrees to go to a concert with him. After arriving by helicopter, John rides a motorbike around the stage, snags a cable and crashes off the front of the stage. John is taken away by ambulance and his entourage leave in the helicopter; forgetting Esther.

Afterwards, John is resting at home by his pool. A radio DJ, Bebe Jesus, hovers over the pool in a helicopter and invites John to his studio. John gets angry and shoots at the helicopter. Bebe Jesus then threatens to never play John’s songs. Later, John goes to the radio station with a case of whiskey to make peace with Bebe Jesus. The disc jockey does not accept John’s apology and calls John an alcoholic over the air. Esther happens to be at the radio station at the same time, taping a commercial. John takes Esther to his mansion and writes her name on the wall with a can of spray paint. There, they make love, have a bubble bath together, and he listens to her playing his piano. She thinks no one would be able to sing to the tune she has written, but he makes up some lyrics and starts singing.

At his next concert, John gets Esther on stage to sing. Although the audience boos when she starts to sing, she wins them over. Later, she tells John she wants them to get married. John replies that he’s no good for her, but she persists, and they marry. John takes Esther to a plot of land he has out west where they build a simple house. She wants a tour co-starring with him, but he thinks she should do the tour on her own. Esther’s career takes off, eclipsing his.

John returns to the studio thinking of restarting his career. He’s told by Bobbie that the band has gone on without him and have renamed themselves. To save face, John asks Bobbie to tell them that he’s found some new artists to work with and wishes them luck.

At home alone, John begins to write a new song. As he sings, he is constantly interrupted by the telephone. Someone asks for Esther and wants to know whether he is her secretary. When Esther returns home, she wants to find out how it went with the band and John tells her it didn’t work out. He changes the subject to find out about Esther’s day and goes through the messages he’s taken for her, one of which is that she’s up for a Grammy Award.

At the Grammy Awards, Esther wins for best female performance. While she is giving her acceptance speech, John arrives late and drunk and makes a scene. Later, Esther tries to talk Brian into giving John a last chance. John is writing songs again but in a different way. Brian calls on John and likes the new songs, but suggests John release some of his old hits along with the new songs. However, John wants to go with the new work only, so he turns down the offer.

Back at his LA mansion, John finds Quentin, a magazine writer, swimming half-naked in his swimming pool. She says she would do anything to get an exclusive interview. Initially he thinks it’s with him, but she confirms it’s an interview with Esther that she wants. When Esther arrives soon after, she finds them in bed together. Quentin tries to interview Esther, but John tells Quentin to get out. Esther and John fight with another, him telling her “I love you” and she “I hate you”, until Esther confesses that she does love him. They return to their small home out west, where they have been happiest.

One day, John wakes early and tells Esther he’s going to pick up Brian from the airport. Esther asks him to hurry back. John leaves the house with a beer in hand and drives off in his flashy sports car. He leaves playing his track “Watch Closely Now” but gets bored and puts on one of Esther’s songs. He continues to drink his beer, while driving too fast and recklessly.

In the next scene, a police dispatch is discussing an accident. The shell of a red sports car is on its side. A helicopter lands at the scene and Esther and Brian run out towards John, whose dead body is covered by a blanket. Esther asks for another blanket and cleans his face. She lies down on John and while crying she asks him what is she supposed to do without him. He is taken away in an ambulance.

Back at the LA mansion, Esther hears John’s voice calling out for someone to answer the telephone. But she discovers it’s just a tape of the old songwriting session during which the telephone had interrupted his singing. She cries on the step in the now empty house, saying that he was a liar and he wasn’t supposed to leave her.

The final scene is what seems to be a memorial concert for John. Esther walks out and is introduced as Esther Hoffman-Howard. The audience raises candles as a tribute to her late husband. She sings the song John wrote for her “With One More Look at You” and then ends with his famous track, “Watch Closely Now”, done in her own style. At the last beat of the song, Esther spreads her arms wide and looks up to the heavens.

Cast[edit]

  • Barbra Streisand as Esther Hoffman Howard
  • Kris Kristofferson as John Norman Howard
  • Gary Busey as Bobbie Ritchie
  • Paul Mazursky as Brian Wexler
  • Joanne Linville as Freddie Lowenstein
  • Oliver Clark as Gary Danziger
  • Venetta Fields as One (of the Oreos)
  • Clydie King as Two (of the Oreos)
  • Sally Kirkland as Photographer
  • Marta Heflin as Quentin
  • Rita Coolidge as Herself
  • Tony Orlando as Himself
  • Uncle Rudy as Mo
  • Susan Richardson as Groupie (uncredited)
  • Robert Englund as Marty (uncredited)
  • Maidie Norman as Justice of the Peace (uncredited)
  • Martin Erlichman as Manager (uncredited)
  • M.G. Kelly as Bebe Jesus

Production[edit]

Directed by Frank Pierson, the film updates the original story and screenplay of William A. Wellman and Robert Carson with additional contributions by Pierson, John Gregory Dunne and Joan Didion. It also features Gary Busey and Sally Kirkland. Venetta Fields and Clydie King perform as Streisand’s backing vocalists «The Oreos». Kristofferson’s then-wife Rita Coolidge and Tony Orlando appear briefly as themselves.

The earlier films had portrayed the behind-the-scenes world of Hollywood filmmaking. However, this version adapted the story to the music business. For example, the 1937 and 1954 films each portrayed the lead female character winning an Academy Award, while the 1976 and 2018 versions depicted the heroine winning a Grammy Award instead.

A Star Is Born was co-produced by Streisand and her then-partner Jon Peters for Barwood Films and Warner Brothers, with Peters and Streisand as producers and Streisand as executive producer. Among actors considered for the male lead were Neil Diamond and Marlon Brando. Streisand and Peters wanted Elvis Presley for the role: they met with Elvis and discussed the film, and he was interested in taking the part, thinking it would revive his film career. Elvis’ manager, Colonel Tom Parker, insisted Elvis have top billing and asked for a substantial sum of money for the role, even though he had not had an acting role since 1969, and people were unsure what kind of box office draw he would be. This effectively ended Elvis’s involvement with the project. Parker also did not want to have Elvis portrayed as having a show business career in decline because this was far from the truth, with Elvis playing to packed auditoriums wherever he toured in the States. Diamond, who knew Streisand and had attended high school with her at Erasmus Hall High School in Brooklyn, was also seriously considered but had to decline due to his extensive concert commitments, and Kristofferson got the part of John Norman Howard.

Kristofferson denied modelling his character on Jim Morrison: «That’s a good idea but it’s not true. I don’t think I ever met Morrison. A lot of people said we looked alike – shirts off, beards – but that washed-up rock star was more about me.»[3]

The film cost around $6 million to produce. Its soundtrack album was also an international success, reaching number 1 in many countries and selling nearly 15 million copies worldwide. It featured the ballad «Evergreen (Love Theme from A Star Is Born)», which became one of the biggest hits of Streisand’s career, spending three weeks at number one in the United States, and peaking at number three in the United Kingdom.[4]

The filming locations included many in Arizona such as downtown Tucson, Tucson Community Center, Sonoita and Tempe,[5] including Sun Devil Stadium.[6] Streisand’s wardrobe was selected from her own personal clothing. The film credit reads: «Miss Streisand’s clothes from… her closet». The film was choreographed by David Winters of West Side Story fame, who worked closely with Streisand to perfect the movie’s dancing sequences.[7][8]

Reception[edit]

Box office[edit]

Looking at the Fox Theater in Westwood Village, where the film "A Star is Born" is premiering, in 1976 from Broxton Avenue.

The film entered general release in the United States on December 19, 1976.[1] It grossed $80 million at the U.S. box office,[2] making it the 2nd highest grossing picture of 1976.

Critical reception[edit]

On review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, the film received an approval rating of 35% based on 40 reviews, with an average rating of 5.4/10. The site’s consensus states; «A lack of memorable music, chemistry between its leads, and an overlong runtime prompts this modish iteration of A Star is Born to fizzle out quickly.»[9] On Metacritic, the film has a weighted average score of 58 out of 100 based on 8 critics, indicating «mixed or average reviews».[10]

Roger Ebert gave the film two and a half stars out of four, writing in his review, «There is, to begin with, no denying Barbra Streisand’s enormous talent. At the end of ‘A Star Is Born’ the camera stays on her for one unbroken shot of seven or eight minutes, and she sings her heart out, and we concede that she’s one of the great stars of the movies, one of the elemental presences…I thought Miss Streisand was distractingly miscast in the role, and yet I forgave her everything when she sang.»[11] Gene Siskel also gave the film two and a half stars, calling it «a lumbering love story made palatable by Streisand’s superb singing.»[12] Variety was positive, calling Streisand’s performance «her finest screen work to date, while Kris Kristofferson’s portrayal of her failing benefactor realizes all the promise first shown five years ago in ‘Cisco Pike.’ Jon Peters’ production is outstanding, and Frank Pierson’s direction is brilliant.»[13] Vincent Canby of The New York Times called it «a transistorized remake, louder than ever, but very small in terms of its being about anything whatsoever.» He also noted that Kristofferson «walks through the film looking very bored.»[14] Charles Champlin of the Los Angeles Times wrote, «The treatment of Streisand is so ceaselessly close up and reverential from the start that there really seems nowhere to go but further up, and little of the mutuality of need that is essential to a love, or a love story … A half-hour in, I wrote ‘a star is boring’ in my notes, and was not later persuaded I’d been wrong.»[15] Gary Arnold of The Washington Post suggested that the film «should be retitled ‘A Star is Embalmed» or «A Star is Entombed’ or simply ‘A Star is Lost’ …. One loses sight of the ostensible dramatic tragedy, because the real tragedy appears to be Streisand’s misuse of her talent.»[16] Geoff Brown of The Monthly Film Bulletin faulted the film for «Streisand’s failure to convince as a rock star, even when singing the docile brand of rock supplied here. Luckily, Kris Kristofferson makes a far better impression. His eyes have the proper faraway look that betokens a mind besotted either with booze or love, and he drifts toward his destiny with none of James Mason’s fireworks but with a great deal of quiet charm.»[17]

In Mad (magazine) issue #193 dated September ’77, the movie was parodied in their «Rock of Aged Dept.» as «A Star’s a Bomb.» (https://www.comics.org/issue/93993/)

Awards and nominations[edit]

In the 1937 and 1954 versions, Janet Gaynor and Judy Garland were each depicted on screen as winning an Academy Award, yet neither won for their film in real life (though Gaynor and Streisand had won Oscars before, and Garland had won an Academy Juvenile Award). In this film, Barbra Streisand is instead depicted as winning a Grammy Award (in real life, the film’s song «Evergreen» won her both a Grammy Award for Song of the Year and an Academy Award for Best Original Song).

According to at least one Streisand biography[vague], unhappy with a few of Frank Pierson’s scenes, Streisand later directed them herself (a claim also made for 1979’s The Main Event), adding to the rumors that she and Pierson clashed constantly during production.

The film is recognized by American Film Institute in these lists:

  • 2004: AFI’s 100 Years…100 Songs:
    • «Evergreen (Love Theme from A Star Is Born)» – #16[22]

Remakes[edit]

A Star Is Born was the second remake of the original 1937 drama, the prior being the 1954 musical starring Judy Garland and James Mason. The story was also adapted as the 2013 Bollywood film Aashiqui 2. Bradley Cooper later starred, directed, co-wrote, and co-produced a 2018 retelling, with Lady Gaga co-starring and composing new music for the film.[23] All four of the official «A Star is Born» movies have been nominated for at least four Academy Awards.[24] In August 2021, while promoting her upcoming album, Streisand suggested that the 2018 film was unoriginal and the “wrong idea” despite her version also being a remake and despite her clear and apparent support & praise of the project both during production and after theatrical release.[25]

Home media[edit]

In 2006, the Region 1 DVD was released in North America in Dolby Digital 5.1 sound with various extras, including a full-length commentary by Barbra Streisand, 16 minutes of never-before-seen and additional footage, and the original wardrobe test. In 2007, the Region 2 DVD with the same extras was released in Germany. In 2008, the Region 4 DVD was released in Australia, the content of which appears to be the same as the Region 1 edition. The DVD has yet to be released in any other region.

Warner Bros. released the film worldwide on the Blu-ray format on February 6, 2013. The DVD and Blu-ray reissues were released as manufacture-on-demand titles on May 14, 2019 by Warner Archive Collection who also reissued the DVD and Blu-ray formats for the 1954 adaption that day.

Soundtrack[edit]

The soundtrack album to the film was released by Columbia Records in 1976.

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c «A Star Is Born». AFI Catalog. American Film Institute. Archived from the original on February 21, 2019. Retrieved February 20, 2019.
  2. ^ a b «A Star Is Born, Box Office Information». Box Office Mojo. Archived from the original on January 27, 2012. Retrieved January 23, 2012.
  3. ^ Bell, Max: «Q&A: Kris Kristofferson»; Classic Rock #148, August 2010, p. 34
  4. ^ Whitburn, Joel (2010). The Billboard Book of Top 40 Hits (9th Revised, Expanded ed.). Billboard Books. p. 631. ISBN 978-0823085545.
  5. ^ Filming locations for A Star Is Born Archived June 2, 2019, at the Wayback Machine Internet Movie Database
  6. ^ Ruelas, Richard. «Misfiled in the Don Bolles files: Filming 1976’s ‘A Star Is Born’ at Sun Devil Stadium». The Arizona Republic. Retrieved November 9, 2019.
  7. ^ David Winters – Awards – IMDb
  8. ^ «IMDb Pro : David Winters Business Details». Pro.imdb.com. April 5, 1939. Archived from the original on June 6, 2012. Retrieved April 1, 2012.
  9. ^ «A Star is Born (1976)». Rotten Tomatoes. Fandango. Archived from the original on September 11, 2018. Retrieved September 22, 2021.
  10. ^ «A Star Is Born (1976) Reviews». Metacritic. CBS Interactive. Archived from the original on June 12, 2018. Retrieved June 7, 2018.
  11. ^ «A Star Is Born Movie Review & Film Summary (1976)». RogerEbert.com. Ebert Digital. Archived from the original on June 12, 2018. Retrieved June 7, 2018.
  12. ^ Siskel, Gene (December 27, 1976). «‘Star’ is a battle royal of titans in a two-note script». Chicago Tribune. Section 2, p. 6.
  13. ^ «A Star Is Born». Variety. December 22, 1976. 20.
  14. ^ Canby, Vincent (December 27, 1976). «Film: Streisand Soups Up a Classic». The New York Times. 56.
  15. ^ Champlin, Charles (December 21, 1976). «Barbra Stars in ‘Star'». Los Angeles Times. Part IV, p. 1, 12.
  16. ^ Arnold, Gary (December 25, 1976). «A Born-Again Failure». The Washington Post. p. C1, C5.
  17. ^ Brown, Geoff (March 1977). «A Star Is Born». The Monthly Film Bulletin. 44 (518): 53.
  18. ^ «The 49th Academy Awards (1977) Nominees and Winners». oscars.org. Archived from the original on February 2, 2018. Retrieved October 3, 2011.
  19. ^ «BAFTA Awards: Film in 1978». BAFTA. 1978. Retrieved June 3, 2021.
  20. ^ «Winners and Nomines:1977». Hollywood Foreign Press Association. Archived from the original on January 19, 2018. Retrieved January 30, 2017.
  21. ^ «1977 Grammy Award Winners». Grammy.com. Retrieved May 1, 2011.
  22. ^ «AFI’s 100 Years…100 Songs» (PDF). American Film Institute. Archived (PDF) from the original on March 13, 2011. Retrieved August 5, 2016.
  23. ^ Kroll, Justin (June 11, 2018). «Lady Gaga Joins Bradley Cooper’s ‘A Star Is Born’ Remake». Variety. Archived from the original on August 20, 2016. Retrieved August 17, 2016.
  24. ^ «Here’s how all 4 versions of ‘A Star Is Born’ did at the Oscars». February 25, 2019. Archived from the original on February 25, 2019. Retrieved February 25, 2019.
  25. ^ Henderson, Cydney. «Barbra Streisand says Bradley Cooper, Lady Gaga’s ‘A Star Is Born’ had the ‘wrong idea’«. USA TODAY. Retrieved August 21, 2021.
  1. ^ Tied with «You Light Up My Life».

External links[edit]

  • A Star Is Born at IMDb
  • A Star Is Born at the TCM Movie Database
  • A Star Is Born at AllMovie
  • A Star Is Born at the American Film Institute Catalog
  • A Star Is Born at Rotten Tomatoes
  • Records/A Star is Born Barbra Streisand Archives
  • «My Battles With Barbra and Jon», New West magazine article by director Frank Pierson
  • The Village Voice article on the making of the film

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

A Star Is Born
A Star Is Born (1976 film poster).jpg

Theatrical release poster

Directed by Frank Pierson
Screenplay by
  • Frank Pierson
  • John Gregory Dunne
  • Joan Didion
Based on

A Star Is Born
by

  • William A. Wellman
  • Robert Carson
  • Dorothy Parker
  • Alan Campbell
Produced by Jon Peters
Starring
  • Barbra Streisand
  • Kris Kristofferson
  • Gary Busey
  • Paul Mazursky
  • Joanne Linville
  • Oliver Clark
Cinematography Robert Surtees
Edited by Peter Zinner
Music by Roger Kellaway

Production
companies

First Artists
Barwood Films[1]

Distributed by Warner Bros.

Release dates

  • December 18, 1976 (Mann Village Theater)
  • December 19, 1976 (United States)

Running time

142 minutes[1]
Country United States
Language English
Budget $6 million
Box office $80 million[2]

A Star Is Born is a 1976 American musical romantic drama film directed by Frank Pierson, written by Pierson, John Gregory Dunne, and Joan Didion. Starring Barbra Streisand as an unknown singer and Kris Kristofferson as an established rock and roll star who fall in love, only to find her career ascending while his goes into decline. A Star Is Born premiered at the Mann Village Theater on December 18, 1976, with a wide release by Warner Bros. the following day. A huge box office success, grossing $80 million on a $6 million budget in North America, the film became the 2nd highest-grossing that year. Reviews praised its performances and musical score, but criticized the screenplay and runtime. At the 49th Academy Awards, the film won Best Original Song for its love theme «Evergreen».

The film is a remake of the 1937 original with Janet Gaynor and Fredric March, notably adapted in 1954 as a musical starring Judy Garland and James Mason; and subsequently again in 2018 with Lady Gaga and Bradley Cooper.

Plot[edit]

John Norman Howard, a famous and self-destructive singer/songwriter rock star, arrives late for a concert. He is drunk, sings a couple of songs, and walks off stage. John’s driver takes him to a bar where Esther Hoffman is singing. One of John’s fans finds him there and starts a fight. Esther grabs John and helps him escape out a back door.

They go to Esther’s, but she invites him to come back for breakfast. Over breakfast (pepperoni pizza), she agrees to go to a concert with him. After arriving by helicopter, John rides a motorbike around the stage, snags a cable and crashes off the front of the stage. John is taken away by ambulance and his entourage leave in the helicopter; forgetting Esther.

Afterwards, John is resting at home by his pool. A radio DJ, Bebe Jesus, hovers over the pool in a helicopter and invites John to his studio. John gets angry and shoots at the helicopter. Bebe Jesus then threatens to never play John’s songs. Later, John goes to the radio station with a case of whiskey to make peace with Bebe Jesus. The disc jockey does not accept John’s apology and calls John an alcoholic over the air. Esther happens to be at the radio station at the same time, taping a commercial. John takes Esther to his mansion and writes her name on the wall with a can of spray paint. There, they make love, have a bubble bath together, and he listens to her playing his piano. She thinks no one would be able to sing to the tune she has written, but he makes up some lyrics and starts singing.

At his next concert, John gets Esther on stage to sing. Although the audience boos when she starts to sing, she wins them over. Later, she tells John she wants them to get married. John replies that he’s no good for her, but she persists, and they marry. John takes Esther to a plot of land he has out west where they build a simple house. She wants a tour co-starring with him, but he thinks she should do the tour on her own. Esther’s career takes off, eclipsing his.

John returns to the studio thinking of restarting his career. He’s told by Bobbie that the band has gone on without him and have renamed themselves. To save face, John asks Bobbie to tell them that he’s found some new artists to work with and wishes them luck.

At home alone, John begins to write a new song. As he sings, he is constantly interrupted by the telephone. Someone asks for Esther and wants to know whether he is her secretary. When Esther returns home, she wants to find out how it went with the band and John tells her it didn’t work out. He changes the subject to find out about Esther’s day and goes through the messages he’s taken for her, one of which is that she’s up for a Grammy Award.

At the Grammy Awards, Esther wins for best female performance. While she is giving her acceptance speech, John arrives late and drunk and makes a scene. Later, Esther tries to talk Brian into giving John a last chance. John is writing songs again but in a different way. Brian calls on John and likes the new songs, but suggests John release some of his old hits along with the new songs. However, John wants to go with the new work only, so he turns down the offer.

Back at his LA mansion, John finds Quentin, a magazine writer, swimming half-naked in his swimming pool. She says she would do anything to get an exclusive interview. Initially he thinks it’s with him, but she confirms it’s an interview with Esther that she wants. When Esther arrives soon after, she finds them in bed together. Quentin tries to interview Esther, but John tells Quentin to get out. Esther and John fight with another, him telling her “I love you” and she “I hate you”, until Esther confesses that she does love him. They return to their small home out west, where they have been happiest.

One day, John wakes early and tells Esther he’s going to pick up Brian from the airport. Esther asks him to hurry back. John leaves the house with a beer in hand and drives off in his flashy sports car. He leaves playing his track “Watch Closely Now” but gets bored and puts on one of Esther’s songs. He continues to drink his beer, while driving too fast and recklessly.

In the next scene, a police dispatch is discussing an accident. The shell of a red sports car is on its side. A helicopter lands at the scene and Esther and Brian run out towards John, whose dead body is covered by a blanket. Esther asks for another blanket and cleans his face. She lies down on John and while crying she asks him what is she supposed to do without him. He is taken away in an ambulance.

Back at the LA mansion, Esther hears John’s voice calling out for someone to answer the telephone. But she discovers it’s just a tape of the old songwriting session during which the telephone had interrupted his singing. She cries on the step in the now empty house, saying that he was a liar and he wasn’t supposed to leave her.

The final scene is what seems to be a memorial concert for John. Esther walks out and is introduced as Esther Hoffman-Howard. The audience raises candles as a tribute to her late husband. She sings the song John wrote for her “With One More Look at You” and then ends with his famous track, “Watch Closely Now”, done in her own style. At the last beat of the song, Esther spreads her arms wide and looks up to the heavens.

Cast[edit]

  • Barbra Streisand as Esther Hoffman Howard
  • Kris Kristofferson as John Norman Howard
  • Gary Busey as Bobbie Ritchie
  • Paul Mazursky as Brian Wexler
  • Joanne Linville as Freddie Lowenstein
  • Oliver Clark as Gary Danziger
  • Venetta Fields as One (of the Oreos)
  • Clydie King as Two (of the Oreos)
  • Sally Kirkland as Photographer
  • Marta Heflin as Quentin
  • Rita Coolidge as Herself
  • Tony Orlando as Himself
  • Uncle Rudy as Mo
  • Susan Richardson as Groupie (uncredited)
  • Robert Englund as Marty (uncredited)
  • Maidie Norman as Justice of the Peace (uncredited)
  • Martin Erlichman as Manager (uncredited)
  • M.G. Kelly as Bebe Jesus

Production[edit]

Directed by Frank Pierson, the film updates the original story and screenplay of William A. Wellman and Robert Carson with additional contributions by Pierson, John Gregory Dunne and Joan Didion. It also features Gary Busey and Sally Kirkland. Venetta Fields and Clydie King perform as Streisand’s backing vocalists «The Oreos». Kristofferson’s then-wife Rita Coolidge and Tony Orlando appear briefly as themselves.

The earlier films had portrayed the behind-the-scenes world of Hollywood filmmaking. However, this version adapted the story to the music business. For example, the 1937 and 1954 films each portrayed the lead female character winning an Academy Award, while the 1976 and 2018 versions depicted the heroine winning a Grammy Award instead.

A Star Is Born was co-produced by Streisand and her then-partner Jon Peters for Barwood Films and Warner Brothers, with Peters and Streisand as producers and Streisand as executive producer. Among actors considered for the male lead were Neil Diamond and Marlon Brando. Streisand and Peters wanted Elvis Presley for the role: they met with Elvis and discussed the film, and he was interested in taking the part, thinking it would revive his film career. Elvis’ manager, Colonel Tom Parker, insisted Elvis have top billing and asked for a substantial sum of money for the role, even though he had not had an acting role since 1969, and people were unsure what kind of box office draw he would be. This effectively ended Elvis’s involvement with the project. Parker also did not want to have Elvis portrayed as having a show business career in decline because this was far from the truth, with Elvis playing to packed auditoriums wherever he toured in the States. Diamond, who knew Streisand and had attended high school with her at Erasmus Hall High School in Brooklyn, was also seriously considered but had to decline due to his extensive concert commitments, and Kristofferson got the part of John Norman Howard.

Kristofferson denied modelling his character on Jim Morrison: «That’s a good idea but it’s not true. I don’t think I ever met Morrison. A lot of people said we looked alike – shirts off, beards – but that washed-up rock star was more about me.»[3]

The film cost around $6 million to produce. Its soundtrack album was also an international success, reaching number 1 in many countries and selling nearly 15 million copies worldwide. It featured the ballad «Evergreen (Love Theme from A Star Is Born)», which became one of the biggest hits of Streisand’s career, spending three weeks at number one in the United States, and peaking at number three in the United Kingdom.[4]

The filming locations included many in Arizona such as downtown Tucson, Tucson Community Center, Sonoita and Tempe,[5] including Sun Devil Stadium.[6] Streisand’s wardrobe was selected from her own personal clothing. The film credit reads: «Miss Streisand’s clothes from… her closet». The film was choreographed by David Winters of West Side Story fame, who worked closely with Streisand to perfect the movie’s dancing sequences.[7][8]

Reception[edit]

Box office[edit]

Looking at the Fox Theater in Westwood Village, where the film "A Star is Born" is premiering, in 1976 from Broxton Avenue.

The film entered general release in the United States on December 19, 1976.[1] It grossed $80 million at the U.S. box office,[2] making it the 2nd highest grossing picture of 1976.

Critical reception[edit]

On review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, the film received an approval rating of 35% based on 40 reviews, with an average rating of 5.4/10. The site’s consensus states; «A lack of memorable music, chemistry between its leads, and an overlong runtime prompts this modish iteration of A Star is Born to fizzle out quickly.»[9] On Metacritic, the film has a weighted average score of 58 out of 100 based on 8 critics, indicating «mixed or average reviews».[10]

Roger Ebert gave the film two and a half stars out of four, writing in his review, «There is, to begin with, no denying Barbra Streisand’s enormous talent. At the end of ‘A Star Is Born’ the camera stays on her for one unbroken shot of seven or eight minutes, and she sings her heart out, and we concede that she’s one of the great stars of the movies, one of the elemental presences…I thought Miss Streisand was distractingly miscast in the role, and yet I forgave her everything when she sang.»[11] Gene Siskel also gave the film two and a half stars, calling it «a lumbering love story made palatable by Streisand’s superb singing.»[12] Variety was positive, calling Streisand’s performance «her finest screen work to date, while Kris Kristofferson’s portrayal of her failing benefactor realizes all the promise first shown five years ago in ‘Cisco Pike.’ Jon Peters’ production is outstanding, and Frank Pierson’s direction is brilliant.»[13] Vincent Canby of The New York Times called it «a transistorized remake, louder than ever, but very small in terms of its being about anything whatsoever.» He also noted that Kristofferson «walks through the film looking very bored.»[14] Charles Champlin of the Los Angeles Times wrote, «The treatment of Streisand is so ceaselessly close up and reverential from the start that there really seems nowhere to go but further up, and little of the mutuality of need that is essential to a love, or a love story … A half-hour in, I wrote ‘a star is boring’ in my notes, and was not later persuaded I’d been wrong.»[15] Gary Arnold of The Washington Post suggested that the film «should be retitled ‘A Star is Embalmed» or «A Star is Entombed’ or simply ‘A Star is Lost’ …. One loses sight of the ostensible dramatic tragedy, because the real tragedy appears to be Streisand’s misuse of her talent.»[16] Geoff Brown of The Monthly Film Bulletin faulted the film for «Streisand’s failure to convince as a rock star, even when singing the docile brand of rock supplied here. Luckily, Kris Kristofferson makes a far better impression. His eyes have the proper faraway look that betokens a mind besotted either with booze or love, and he drifts toward his destiny with none of James Mason’s fireworks but with a great deal of quiet charm.»[17]

In Mad (magazine) issue #193 dated September ’77, the movie was parodied in their «Rock of Aged Dept.» as «A Star’s a Bomb.» (https://www.comics.org/issue/93993/)

Awards and nominations[edit]

In the 1937 and 1954 versions, Janet Gaynor and Judy Garland were each depicted on screen as winning an Academy Award, yet neither won for their film in real life (though Gaynor and Streisand had won Oscars before, and Garland had won an Academy Juvenile Award). In this film, Barbra Streisand is instead depicted as winning a Grammy Award (in real life, the film’s song «Evergreen» won her both a Grammy Award for Song of the Year and an Academy Award for Best Original Song).

According to at least one Streisand biography[vague], unhappy with a few of Frank Pierson’s scenes, Streisand later directed them herself (a claim also made for 1979’s The Main Event), adding to the rumors that she and Pierson clashed constantly during production.

The film is recognized by American Film Institute in these lists:

  • 2004: AFI’s 100 Years…100 Songs:
    • «Evergreen (Love Theme from A Star Is Born)» – #16[22]

Remakes[edit]

A Star Is Born was the second remake of the original 1937 drama, the prior being the 1954 musical starring Judy Garland and James Mason. The story was also adapted as the 2013 Bollywood film Aashiqui 2. Bradley Cooper later starred, directed, co-wrote, and co-produced a 2018 retelling, with Lady Gaga co-starring and composing new music for the film.[23] All four of the official «A Star is Born» movies have been nominated for at least four Academy Awards.[24] In August 2021, while promoting her upcoming album, Streisand suggested that the 2018 film was unoriginal and the “wrong idea” despite her version also being a remake and despite her clear and apparent support & praise of the project both during production and after theatrical release.[25]

Home media[edit]

In 2006, the Region 1 DVD was released in North America in Dolby Digital 5.1 sound with various extras, including a full-length commentary by Barbra Streisand, 16 minutes of never-before-seen and additional footage, and the original wardrobe test. In 2007, the Region 2 DVD with the same extras was released in Germany. In 2008, the Region 4 DVD was released in Australia, the content of which appears to be the same as the Region 1 edition. The DVD has yet to be released in any other region.

Warner Bros. released the film worldwide on the Blu-ray format on February 6, 2013. The DVD and Blu-ray reissues were released as manufacture-on-demand titles on May 14, 2019 by Warner Archive Collection who also reissued the DVD and Blu-ray formats for the 1954 adaption that day.

Soundtrack[edit]

The soundtrack album to the film was released by Columbia Records in 1976.

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c «A Star Is Born». AFI Catalog. American Film Institute. Archived from the original on February 21, 2019. Retrieved February 20, 2019.
  2. ^ a b «A Star Is Born, Box Office Information». Box Office Mojo. Archived from the original on January 27, 2012. Retrieved January 23, 2012.
  3. ^ Bell, Max: «Q&A: Kris Kristofferson»; Classic Rock #148, August 2010, p. 34
  4. ^ Whitburn, Joel (2010). The Billboard Book of Top 40 Hits (9th Revised, Expanded ed.). Billboard Books. p. 631. ISBN 978-0823085545.
  5. ^ Filming locations for A Star Is Born Archived June 2, 2019, at the Wayback Machine Internet Movie Database
  6. ^ Ruelas, Richard. «Misfiled in the Don Bolles files: Filming 1976’s ‘A Star Is Born’ at Sun Devil Stadium». The Arizona Republic. Retrieved November 9, 2019.
  7. ^ David Winters – Awards – IMDb
  8. ^ «IMDb Pro : David Winters Business Details». Pro.imdb.com. April 5, 1939. Archived from the original on June 6, 2012. Retrieved April 1, 2012.
  9. ^ «A Star is Born (1976)». Rotten Tomatoes. Fandango. Archived from the original on September 11, 2018. Retrieved September 22, 2021.
  10. ^ «A Star Is Born (1976) Reviews». Metacritic. CBS Interactive. Archived from the original on June 12, 2018. Retrieved June 7, 2018.
  11. ^ «A Star Is Born Movie Review & Film Summary (1976)». RogerEbert.com. Ebert Digital. Archived from the original on June 12, 2018. Retrieved June 7, 2018.
  12. ^ Siskel, Gene (December 27, 1976). «‘Star’ is a battle royal of titans in a two-note script». Chicago Tribune. Section 2, p. 6.
  13. ^ «A Star Is Born». Variety. December 22, 1976. 20.
  14. ^ Canby, Vincent (December 27, 1976). «Film: Streisand Soups Up a Classic». The New York Times. 56.
  15. ^ Champlin, Charles (December 21, 1976). «Barbra Stars in ‘Star'». Los Angeles Times. Part IV, p. 1, 12.
  16. ^ Arnold, Gary (December 25, 1976). «A Born-Again Failure». The Washington Post. p. C1, C5.
  17. ^ Brown, Geoff (March 1977). «A Star Is Born». The Monthly Film Bulletin. 44 (518): 53.
  18. ^ «The 49th Academy Awards (1977) Nominees and Winners». oscars.org. Archived from the original on February 2, 2018. Retrieved October 3, 2011.
  19. ^ «BAFTA Awards: Film in 1978». BAFTA. 1978. Retrieved June 3, 2021.
  20. ^ «Winners and Nomines:1977». Hollywood Foreign Press Association. Archived from the original on January 19, 2018. Retrieved January 30, 2017.
  21. ^ «1977 Grammy Award Winners». Grammy.com. Retrieved May 1, 2011.
  22. ^ «AFI’s 100 Years…100 Songs» (PDF). American Film Institute. Archived (PDF) from the original on March 13, 2011. Retrieved August 5, 2016.
  23. ^ Kroll, Justin (June 11, 2018). «Lady Gaga Joins Bradley Cooper’s ‘A Star Is Born’ Remake». Variety. Archived from the original on August 20, 2016. Retrieved August 17, 2016.
  24. ^ «Here’s how all 4 versions of ‘A Star Is Born’ did at the Oscars». February 25, 2019. Archived from the original on February 25, 2019. Retrieved February 25, 2019.
  25. ^ Henderson, Cydney. «Barbra Streisand says Bradley Cooper, Lady Gaga’s ‘A Star Is Born’ had the ‘wrong idea’«. USA TODAY. Retrieved August 21, 2021.
  1. ^ Tied with «You Light Up My Life».

External links[edit]

  • A Star Is Born at IMDb
  • A Star Is Born at the TCM Movie Database
  • A Star Is Born at AllMovie
  • A Star Is Born at the American Film Institute Catalog
  • A Star Is Born at Rotten Tomatoes
  • Records/A Star is Born Barbra Streisand Archives
  • «My Battles With Barbra and Jon», New West magazine article by director Frank Pierson
  • The Village Voice article on the making of the film

«Звезда родилась» Брэдли Купера: нестандартный разбор фильма с Леди Гагой

Режиссерский дебют актера Брэдли Купера с певицей Леди Гагой «Звезда родилась» по мотивам классического мюзикла ругали на Венецианском кинофестивале, а теперь он собирает отличную кассу и отзывы американских кинокритиков, уже предрекающих «Оскары». Публикуем рецензию кинокритика Алексея Васильева, который умеет хлестко описать ситуацию.

Бывалый гуру кантри-рока Джексон Майн (Брэдли Купер, он же дебютирует в этом фильме как режиссер) — беспробудный алкаш. Сорвав очередную бурю оваций на концерте, он катается по ночному городу в поисках выпивки — нынче это проблема. Местом, где наливают, оказывается трансвеститский клуб. Пока Майн ублажает себя за барной стойкой, череду переодетых мужиков на сцене нарушает настоящая девушка Элли. Правда, слишком узкоплечая, большеголовая, в трико и шиньоне, фигурой похожая на Шалтай-Болтая, но все же — девушка (Леди Гага). Она ложится на барную стойку и исполняет песню Эдит Пиаф «Жизнь в розовом цвете», правда, с адским акцентом и перевирая французские слова, но все же исполняет. И на барной стойке. И там есть выпивка. Короче, Майну нравится. Через 20 минут экранного времени он вытолкнет ее на сцену посреди своего концерта, она споет композицию собственного сочинения, а еще через 10 минут все забудут Майна и провозгласят новым гуру девушку Элли. Майн влюблен и в нее, и в ее слова, и в музыку, и ему даже наплевать на улизнувшую собственную славу, он уже даже готов расстаться с бутылкой — пока Элли не попадает в лапы менеджеров, которые начинают делать из нее поющие трусы. Майн идет на новый и терминальный виток запоя.

Русский трейлер «Звезда родилась»

Перед нами мюзикл с Леди Гагой, и потому сразу ответим на первостепенные вопросы: как Леди Гага играет, звучит и вообще смотрится на большом экране? Играет — ничего. Манерой исполнения очень похожа на нашу комическую артистку Елену Воробей — роднят их не только мелочи, характерные черты мимического рисунка, но и доминанта поведения: они как бы прикалываются. Даже когда на экране все чертовски серьезно, в том, как Леди Гага преподносит Элли, всегда остается место для отступления «Гы-гы» и «Ой, да ладно!» На любителя, но терпимо. У нее вполне правдоподобно получается приземленная низким происхождением девушка наших дней. Другое дело, что это не совсем тот человек, с которым мечтаешь запереться на два часа в темном кинозале, предварительно оплатив это мероприятие.

Звучит Леди Гага — отлично. Неплохие акустические вещи под гитару («Shallow», «Always Remember Us This Way») выгодно поданы в Dolby Surround. Особенно удались сцены рок-концертов на свежем воздухе, с их пристальными прожекторами и особой аурой первобытного жертвоприношения (где в качестве жертвы — исполнитель на сцене). Они сконцентрированы во второй четверти фильма, и здесь он набирает воздух — оставшийся час он его методично спускает, уподобившись резиновому крокодилу, из которого выдернули затычку, и он тает и деформируется, пока не превратится в зеленую тряпочку на полу. В музыке там тоже происходит слом и спад, потому что ее героиня дальше работает уже с подтанцовкой, в кислотном парике и под фанеру — и среди прочего на самом деле исполняет переложенный на английский дословно стишок «Что ты ходишь, попой водишь, на меня тоску наводишь?» («Why Did You Do That?»).

Вообще, как и в случае с киноэскападами Аллы Пугачевой, в мюзикле Гаги драйв приходит на смену неловкости, только когда она поет живьем. Если хотите получить реально отличное впечатление, опоздайте на 30 минут и бегите из зала, ровно когда на экране появится Алек Болдуин в качестве телеведущего «Субботнего вечера» и, объявив Элли, зачем-то покачает раздавшимися бедрами влево и вправо (довольно гипнотическое действо).

Среди тысяч трансформаций, которые претерпела дива эпохи мемов и косплея, для кинофильма Леди Гага приберегла самый долгожданный: что будет, если ее внешний вид максимально приблизить к натуральному, который ей дан от природы. В начале фильма Элли предстает в униформе официантки, в чьи обязанности также входит вынос мусора. Она клянет свою работу, тяготится, но ничего лучше найти ей не светит, поругивает в перекур начальство с коллегой-геем, но исправно возвращается с подносом в зал. Так вот, именно и в первую очередь естественные внешные данные Леди Гаги, «ее натуральный цвет», позволяют нам поверить в ее героиню. В фильме все бесконечно придираются к ее носу: мол, слишком длинный, слишком большой, с таким, мол, на телевидение вообще на пустят. У Элли и Майна даже вырабатывается интимный мем, повторяющийся раз пять на протяжении фильма, когда перед уходом Элли встает в профиль и проводит пальцем по горбинке на своем носу. Хотя из этого носа, можно сказать, и вырос весь этот проект.

Новая «Звезда родилась» стала уже четвертой американской картиной на сюжет одноименного фильма 1937 года, и бог знает каким ремейком, если брать страны третьего мира: у нас, например, в начале 80-х имела успех турецкая киноверсия «Прощальная песня любви», в которой играла и пела Сезен Аксу, мощная дива, перешагнувшая популярность в кругу любителей турецкой эстрады, певшая с оркестром Горана Бреговича («Калашников» — это она). Тот фильм, снятый небесполезным режиссером Атыфом Йылмазом (автором пронизывающей, подобно степному ветру, «Красной косынки» по Чингизу Айтматову), внес свои коррективы в копилку размышлений цикла «Звезда родилась». Потому что каждый фильм много чего говорил о своей эпохе.

Первый, рузвельтовский, времен преодоления Великой депрессии 1937 года, говорил, что за успех нужно заплатить разбитым сердцем. Второй, 1954-го, с Джуди Гарленд, вышел в эпоху психоанализа, проблемных пьес и подавленных маккартизмом настроений и больше был сосредоточен на самой трагедии алкоголизма (который до этого воспринимали не как болезнь, а как недостойное поведение). Фильм асоциального 1976 года с Барброй Стрейзанд, которая в финале со слезами ярости поет хит погибшего любовника-алкоголика «Watch Closely Now, Are You Watching Me Now», был обращен к выжившим: как обратить утрату себе во благо, заставить эту боль работать на себя. В 1979 году, когда как реакция на всеобщий загул возник первый призыв дауншифтеров, героиня Сезен Аксу, став «поющими трусами», сама бралась за бутылку и сигареты, но после гибели мужа оставляла эстраду, чтобы не пойти по его стопам.

Сейчас будет спойлер про новый фильм, если вы не в курсе канонического сюжета «Звезда родилась».

Новую картину характеризует то, что жертв здесь две и нет победителей. Не только Майн кончает с собой — пережившую его подругу зажевывает шоу-бизнес. В отличие от героини Стрейзанд, которая черпала силы в мысленном общении с погибшим Майном для того, чтобы «он внимательно смотрел», как у нее получится оставаться одновременно собой и суперзвездой, Элли после смерти Майна больше себе не принадлежит. Ее успех — это успех автомата, который оставляют включенным, покуда за его газировку бросают монеты. В фильме нет конструктивной программы, он безрадостен. Все подано, как теперь принято, без метафор, как есть.

В каждом из прежних фильмов «Звезда родилась» есть сцена, где Майн по пьяни срывает своей протеже вручение «Грэмми» (или «Оскара», или турецкой, или индийской музыкальной премии), он всегда ведет себя вызывающе, но эти его невольные пощечины жене символичны, а здесь он просто обоссался на сцене. Майн всегда кончал с собой, но красиво — уходя в море или загоняя кадиллак в пшеничный закат: здесь он идет в сарай со снятым для повешения ремнем.

Вроде, все так: это «Звезда родилась» нашей эры, а у нас эра сермяжной правды, мы отвоевали это право говорить без обиняков. И все же подлинно сермяжная правда о природе данного произведения проявляется не в гадости, которую транслирует экран, а в диалоге, в который вступает Майн-Купер с продюсером, сделавшим из Элли поющие трусы. Увидев его голую щиколотку над кроссовком, Майн говорит: «Никогда не мог понять моды, ради которой ходят с потными ногами». «А у меня ничего не потеет, — отвечает продюсер и показывает следки. — Я в носках, просто их не видно».

Так же и этот фильм остается в носках, пытаясь при этом убедить вас, что вы видите голую ногу: выворачивать из вас душу, демонстрируя шокирующую правду.

Играя на наших нервах, а точнее, испытывая нашу брезгливость, авторы даже не утрудили себя попрактиковаться в собственно творчестве. Это не искусство — просто перечисление клинических фактов. В фильме со Стрейзанд диалоги были наделены сжатой образностью, из двух фраз мы узнавали о стиле жизни и характерах героев все: «Как тебя зовут?». — «Эстер Хоффман». — «Хоффман?» — «А что не по-вашему?» — «Наоборот, мне очень нравится. Из девушек, с которыми я познакомился в этом месяце, вы первая с фамилией». В новом фильме даже лучшие песни больше смахивают на переложенный на музыку учебник популярной психиатрии, чем на поэзию: «Тебя еще не доконали попытки заполнить эту пустоту? Или ты жаждешь большего? Тебя не вымотало так выкладываться? Падаю я. Когда получше, жду перемен. Когда похуже, самой себя боюсь».

Вообще-то темы «Звезда родилась» достаточно болезненные, одна только «Как пережить смерть любимого алкоголика?» чего стоит: неслучайно этот сюжет так исправно переснимают уже 80 лет на разных континентах. Но в 2018 году новый буквализм исключил саму идею творческой мысли, а только она одна и способна указать выход и дать альтернативу тупику. Материализм не работает, когда затронуты вопросы души. Крис Кристофферсон, игравший Майна в фильме со Стрейзанд, к началу съемок в самом деле уже был законченным алкоголиком, приводя в неистовство навещавших съемки журналистов, но, посмотрев готовый фильм, бросил пить. С новой картины публика то и дело убегала в туалет. Когда на экране у кого-то просто течет струя мочи по штанине, это бьет по психомоторике, но вряд ли объясняет, как жить дальше после того, как успеешь добежать до писсуара.

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