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Download filme amy winehouse 2015Download filme amy winehouse 2015.Amy (2015)
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You can now login with your mobile number too. Register Mobile Number. Ok got it! Your password has been successfully updated Ok got it! Enter Existing Password. Enter New Password. You just couldn't get enough of her likable personality. It's a very sad story, which director Asif Kapadia 'Senna' tells perfectly through only home video footage and present day voice interviews with those closest to the talented singer.
Amy's parents, friends, and management company allowed for all of the intimate concert footage, behind the scenes footage, and the rare home movies to be showed here, however, Amy's parents are not too happy now, once they've seen the final product.
This makes me laugh, because her parents aren't exactly good people, and were mostly responsible for her downfall. Simply titled 'Amy', we get a glimpse of Amy's life before she made it famous. She sure was a lot of fun, as we see her hanging out with friends and being a little ham at birthday parties or even pretending to give a house tour as a Spanish maid.
It was quite funny. With interviews with her own parents, closest friends, and even Mark Ronson, Salaam Remi, Yassin Bey, Tony Bennett, and Questlove, we see through the eyes of those near her, what life was like.
Even her awful human being of a lover she kept, Blake Fielder is interviewed here, and he is as atrocious as he was ten years ago, without a remorse for anything related to Amy or in life really. Once she started seeing the druggie Fielder, is where things started slowly going downhill, which is where this documentary turns to a more somber note. Don't get me wrong, Amy could have changed her ways, or even gotten better help, but she didn't know how to.
And nobody close to her really was telling her "no", especially her parents. We all know how everything turned out, as it was widely reported in media.
It's heartbreaking. But nobody can deny that she was one of the best jazz vocalists to have ever lived. Her almost instant rise to super stardom caused a lot of problems, because all she wanted to be was a normal person without all of the cameras in her face. Asif Kapadia's poignant look at Amy Winehouse by paul-allaer "Amy" release; min. The documentary then swiftly goes on to , when we see and hear Amy in a jazz band, and before we know it, we are already in Along the way we see Amy getting better at writing and singing, and at boozing too.
To tell you more would spoil your viewing experience, you'll just have to see for yourself how it all plays out. It went on to win multiple nominations and awards. So when I heard that a documentary on the life and times of singer Amy Winehouse was being made, and that none other than Asif Kapadia was the driving force behind it, I was reasonably sure that it would be a darn good film.
Now that I have finally seen this, I can unequivocally state that this is a tough yet honest and of course an intrinsically very sad look at Amy Winehouse, but that as a documentary, "Amy" is top-notch, pure and simple. Kapadia had the full cooperation of the Winehouse family to all the archival footage and there seems to be a TON of it, including never before seen home footage , and he had also the final cut.
As you may have heard, the Winehouse family, having seen the final cut, then disavowed the movie. Why, you may ask? Let's just say that Amy's dad, Mitchell, seems more interested in Amy's money than in Amy's well-being. And it's not like Kapadia has to make it up or anything: it's all right there on tape and in Mitch's own words! Second, there is some unbelievably great footage of Amy performing "Stronger Than Me" in at Island Records; "What Is It About Men" at the North Jazz Festival in Rotterdam; and most chilling of all, "Back to Black" filmed in the studio in what turns out to be the perfect take, where we hear Amy mostly a-cappella with her headphones on, and her arm casually on a chair, wow, just wow.
There are many other stunning moments in this documentary, I can't even begin to list them all. Most amazing is of course that when Amy was at the peak of her creativity in , she was just yrs.
I saw Amy perform at Coachella in April, , just as the rocket ship to fame and fortune was taking off. Incredible performance. Last, when Amy becomes the victim of her own success and is hounded relentlessly by the British paparazzi, it all feels eerily familiar to seeing Princess Diana in her last couple of years. Beware: "Amy" is at times uncomfortable viewing, for many reasons, but "Amy" simply reflects the uncomfortable aspects of Amy's life, and does not sugarcoat things or aims to make this film into a 'love letter' to Amy Winehouse.
At times uncomfortable, yes, but riveting from start to finish, watch "Amy" scoop up many nominations when the awards season comes around later this year and in early I had been looking forward to seeing this for a long time.
The early evening screening where I saw this was very nicely attended, to my pleasant surprise. When word-of-mouth gets around, I bet this will play for quite a while in the theaters. If you like top-notch documentaries, regardless of whether you know much of Amy Winehouse going in, you cannot go wrong with this. A very worthy attempt at bringing the Amy Winehouse story to the screen by Red-Barracuda I remember when Amy Winehouse died back in it had a certain inevitability about it yet was still shocking and very sad.
The media had made a meal out of her problems documenting them at every given opportunity and her increasingly emancipated appearance was publicised for all to see, courtesy of the lowlifes of the paparazzi. Hers was life in a goldfish bowl by the end and for a person who never wanted fame in the first place; this made her life all the more difficult. Thanks to an abundance of revelatory home video footage, soundtracked by incisive interviews, we see her not only as the beehived, cat- eyed chanteuse or the alarmingly ribbed tabloid quarry, tumbling out of a club at 3am, but as a shy, spotty teen with a seductive offhand confidence in her vocal gift.
I'm not an enormous fan of Winehouse's music, I think because her deeply personal writing and distinctive, expressive voice tended to be masked by such contrived, Americanised pastiche — trading first on '30s jazz and then '60s girl groups — but the portrait that emerges here is uncompromising, thrilling and frequently devastating: of an unhappy girl equipped with a massive talent, but none of the stability or serenity to deal with the perpetual media storm that her success brought upon her.
We see stand-ups and TV presenters laughing at her bulimia and drug abuse, her management pushing her out of rehab and onto foreign stages, and — in the second half — a rapacious, vulturous paparazzi incessantly stalking her, an essential decency chillingly absent.
If that was my job, I think I would struggle to watch this film and think: "Yes, what I am doing with my life is essentially fine. Though it essentially doubles an indictment of a society almost entirely lacking in basic compassion and empathy, it's a work that possesses both virtues in apparently limitless amounts, surely compressing and simplifying an impossibly complex narrative, but attaining something that seems awfully like the truth — and apparently is, according to her closest friends.
Amy is a tough watch, but it feels essential, not just for its vivid picture of a fascinating, deeply troubled young woman, but also for its wider significance: as a plea for people to stop being so horribly selfish, to stop seeing excess and illness as 'rock and roll' and drug abuse as a joke, and for the media to realise that if it wants to paint itself as a crusading Fifth Estate, then some basic humanity wouldn't go amiss.
Details Edit. Release date July 3, United States. United Kingdom. Untitled Amy Winehouse Documentary. Camden, London, England, UK. Film4 On the Corner Films. Box office Edit. Technical specs Edit. Runtime 2 hours 8 minutes.
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