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Farinelli(film)

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Farinelli
Theatrical release poster
Directed byGérard Corbiau
Written byMarcel Beaulieu
Andrée Corbiau
Gérard Corbiau
Produced byVéra Belmont
StarringStefano Dionisi
Enrico Lo Verso
Elsa Zylberstein
CinematographyWalther van den Ende
Edited byJoëlle Hache
Music byJohann Adolf Hasse(composer: additional music)
Nicola Porpora(composer: additional music)
Ewa Malas-Godlewska(singer)
Derek Lee Ragin(singer)
Production
companies
Stéphan Films
MG
Italian International Film
K2 SA
Alinea Films
Union Generale Cinematographique
Canal+
France 2 Cinéma
Studio Image
Mediaset
RTL-TVI
Filmstiftung Nordrhein-Westfalen
Distributed bySony Pictures Classics(Region 1DVD)
Release dates
  • 7 December 1994(1994-12-07)(France)
  • 16 March 1995(1995-03-16)(Italy)
Running time
111 minutes
CountriesItaly
Belgium
France
LanguagesItalian
French
Budget$9 million
Box office$11.5 million[1]

Farinelliis a 1994 internationally co-producedbiographicaldrama filmdirected byGérard Corbiauand starringStefano Dionisi,Enrico Lo Verso,Elsa Zylberstein,andJeroen Krabbé.It centers on the life and career of the 18th-century Italian opera singer Carlo Broschi, known asFarinelli,considered the greatestcastratosinger of all time; as well as his relationship with his brother, the composerRiccardo Broschi.[2]

Plot

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The prologue begins with Carlo Broschi, the famous castrato Farinelli, reminiscing about his childhood as a singer in the church choir. A newly castrated boy runs in and warns Carlo that his voice will result in death, then ends himself. Carlo is traumatized and refuses to sing a composition by his older brother Riccardo for his voice teacher,Nicola Porpora.He cries and runs to his father, who comforts him, but extracts a promise that he will never refuse his voice to his brother again. The film proper opens inMadrid,Spain,at the palace ofKing Philip V.Riccardo Broschi (Enrico Lo Verso) demands to see his brother Carlo (Stefano Dionisi), now known by his nickname, Farinelli. Carlo refuses him.[2]

The rest of the film is told in flashback. Eighteen years earlier, Carlo and Riccardo watched an itinerant trumpet player humiliate a youngcastrato.Angered, Carlo humiliates the trumpeter, to the delight of the crowd. Riccardo seduces a pretty lady in the crowd, using his brother as bait: Carlo begins to make love to her, then Riccardo steps in to complete the act. Meanwhile,George Frideric Händel(Jeroen Krabbé) has heard Farinelli sing from his carriage. He asks Carlo to come to Great Britain and perform, but Riccardo demands to be included. Handel sneers at Riccardo as a hack, humiliates Carlo as a freak, and leaves.[2]

Several years pass, and Carlo is now famous. He impresses the Comtesse Mauer (Marianne Basler), a beautiful and rich young woman more interested in books than opera. The brothers maintain their sexual accommodation: Carlo seduces the comtesse´s maid and Riccardo consummates the sex act. Carlo receives a letter from Handel, who wants to hear Carlo sing inDresden.Carlo suddenly falls ill with a fever during which Riccardo repeats a story he has told Carlo since he was a child: Carlo had been injured in a fall from a horse, and the castration surgery was necessary to save his life. In Dresden, Handel meets Carlo just before the curtain rises and tells him the KingGeorge IIwants him to sing. Unnerved by Handel's offer, Carlo faints on stage. A self-satisfied Handel departs; Carlo waits for him in vain.[2]

Carlo is soon invited toLondonby the young Alexandra Lerris (Elsa Zylberstein). Handel'sCovent Gardenopera house is bankrupting the nearbyOpera of the Nobility,sponsored by thePrince of Walesand run by Carlo's old vocal teacher Porpora (Omero Antonutti). In London, Carlo and Riccardo meet Margareth Hunter (Caroline Cellier) and her crippled son Benedict (Renaud du Peloux de Saint Romain). Carlo proposes to her, but she refuses out of respect for her late husband. Carlo begins to realize that Riccardo's highly ornamented compositions lack true artistry; he covets Handel's operas and tries to impress him. Alexandra, who is in love with Carlo, steals some of Handel's music for Carlo to perform. The relationship between the two brothers deteriorates. Searching Riccardo's house for the stolen music, Handel confronts him and sabotages the relationship. Beguiled by Handel, Riccardo reveals (in a flashback-within-a-flashback) that Carlo was a superb singer as a child, and when their father died, the fear of losing that voice prompted him to drug Carlo and castrate him illegally, then promise to compose for him a great opera: "Orpheus."[2][3]: 87 

That evening, Handel meets with Farinelli backstage. He tells Farinelli the secret of his castration and allows him to sing the stolen music. Shocked and heartbroken, Carlo sings Handel's music (the ariaLascia ch'io pianga[4]) so beautifully that Handel faints.

The flashback ends. We learn that Carlo and Alexandra fled from Riccardo to the royal court of Spain, and has not sung in public since his triumph at the Opera of the Nobility three years earlier. Carlo has never forgiven Riccardo, but Alexandra, who understands the bond between the brothers, tries to reconcile them: she steals Riccardo's "Orpheus." Carlo sees that Riccardo has finally written the promised masterpiece, but still can't forgive. Carlo sings for King Philip during asolar eclipse.As Riccardo listens to Carlo sing, he is overwhelmed by guilt and the broken relationship, and attempts suicide by slashing his wrist. After falling unconscious fromblood loss,he is brought to the house Carlo and Alexandra share, where he recovers. Carlo, realizing the atonement of his brother's actions, forgives Riccardo forcastratinghim. Together, the brothersmake loveto Alexandra. Some months pass. Alexandra is nowpregnantwith Riccardo's child, whom Carlo and Alexandra treat as their own. The film ends as Riccardo leaves Madrid to seek his fortune as a composer, taking comfort in the fact that in leaving Carlo with a child to father, he has given his brother back his "share of humanity."[2]

Cast

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Actor Role
Stefano Dionisi Carlo Maria Broschi
Enrico Lo Verso Riccardo Broschi
Elsa Zylberstein Alexandra
Jeroen Krabbé George Frideric Handel
Caroline Cellier Margaret Hunter
Renaud du Peloux de Saint Romain Benedict
Omero Antonutti Nicola Porpora
Marianne Basler Comtesse Mauer
Pier Paolo Capponi Broschi
Graham Valentine Prince of Wales
Jacques Boudet Philip V
Delphine Zentout Young admirer

Production

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Although Dionisi provided the speaking voice (originally in French), Farinelli's singing voice was given by the PolishsopranoEwa Malas-Godlewskaand the AmericancountertenorDerek Lee Ragin,who were recorded separately and then digitally merged to recreate the sound of acastrato.[5][6]Its musical director was the French harpsichordist and conductorChristophe Rousset.[3]The musical recording was made at a concert hall, theArsenalinMetz,with the orchestraLes Talens Lyriques;the soundtrack includes music by Broschi,Idaspe,Hasse,CleofideandAtaserse,Handel, hisDixit DominusandRinaldo,and by Porpora, hisPolifemo.Parts of the movie were filmed at theMargravial Opera HouseinBayreuth.

Controversy over historical depictions

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The historical Farinelli in a contemporary portrait byBartolomeo Nazari

Relatively little detail is known of Farinelli's life, and the film makes inventive use of what is known, including elements for which there is no historical basis.[2]Among the historically documented elements of the film are the rivalry between Handel and Porpora, the account of Farinelli competing with a trumpeter for holding a note and his skill as a harpsichordist.[2]

Although loosely based on known events, the film takesdramatic licensewith many specific details on music and the facts of Farinelli's life.[7]The film is largely concerned with a speculative psychological account of Farinelli’s experience.[8][9]The central tension between Farinelli and his brother, portrayed in the film, is that Riccardo had him castrated, which is doubtful. Likewise, a meeting between Farinelli and Handel inNaplesin which Farinelli spits on the composer is also dubious.[3]: 86  Riccardo Broschi had less importance in Farinelli's career than is depicted in the film, and neither brother was as dependent on the other as the film suggests. The idea that Farinelli raised his brother’s child is simply fanciful, as is the notion that after hearing Farinelli sing his operatic work, Handel was no longer able to compose.[2][10]

Reception

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Farinelliwas released in 1994 and won theGolden Globefor Best Foreign Language Film in 1995.[11]It was also nominated for anAcademy Awardin the same category.[12]

See also

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References

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  1. ^"Farinelli (1994) - JPBox-Office".
  2. ^abcdefghiMelissa U. D. Goldsmith; Paige A. Willson; Anthony J. Fonseca (7 October 2016).The Encyclopedia of Musicians and Bands on Film.Rowman & Littlefield Publishers. pp. 114–118.ISBN978-1-4422-6987-3.
  3. ^abcCharles P. Mitchell (11 July 2015).The Great Composers Portrayed on Film, 1913 through 2002.McFarland. p. 89.ISBN978-1-4766-0985-0.
  4. ^Haynes, Bruce,The End of Early Music,Oxford University Press US, 2007, p. 25.ISBN0-19-518987-6
  5. ^Steven Cornelius; Mary Natvig (3 June 2016).Music: A Social Experience.Routledge. p. 68.ISBN978-1-315-40429-5.
  6. ^William Ralph Bennett Jr. (4 September 2018).The Science of Musical Sound: Volume 1: Stringed Instruments, Pipe Organs, and the Human Voice.Springer. p. 287.ISBN978-3-319-92796-1.
  7. ^Jeongwon Joe (13 May 2016).Opera as Soundtrack.Routledge. p. 171.ISBN978-1-317-08548-5.
  8. ^Annette Simonis (31 March 2014).Intermediales Spiel im Film: Ästhetische Erfahrung zwischen Schrift, Bild und Musik.transcript Verlag. pp. 129–155.ISBN978-3-8394-1520-7.
  9. ^Harris, Ellen (Summer 1997). "Twentieth-Century Farinelli".The Musical Quarterly.81(2): 180–189.doi:10.1093/mq/81.2.180.JSTOR742459.
  10. ^Servando D. Halili (2006).Iconography of the New Empire: Race and Gender Images and the American Colonization of the Philippines.UP Press. p. 124.ISBN978-971-542-505-6.
  11. ^August, Marilyn (17 March 1995)."Movie About 18th-Century Castrato Uses Technology to Create Voice".AP News.Retrieved9 February2020.
  12. ^"The 67th Academy Awards (1995) Nominees and Winners".oscars.org.Retrieved26 September2015.
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