IMDb RATING
7.3/10
4.5K
YOUR RATING
Antonia Brico dreams of becoming a conductor, but she isn't taken seriously because she is a woman.Antonia Brico dreams of becoming a conductor, but she isn't taken seriously because she is a woman.Antonia Brico dreams of becoming a conductor, but she isn't taken seriously because she is a woman.
- Awards
- 3 wins
Seumas Sargent
- Mark Goldsmith
- (as Seumas F. Sargent)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaIn the movie the orchestra performs some parts of 'Peter and the Wolf', composed by Sergej Prokofjev. The movie ends with the concert in Town Hall in 1935. The premiere of 'Peter and the Wolf' was in Moscow in 1936...
- Quotes
Antonia Brico: Is keeping quiet about something, the same as lying?
- SoundtracksMahler: Symphony No. 4
Composed by Gustav Mahler
Performed by Radio Philharmonic Orchestra
Music Publisher: SSF Publishing
Featured review
As a (classical) music lover and agreeing with the filmmaker that Antonia Brico more than deserves to be put in the spotlight, I had high expectations of this movie. Maybe they were set too high: I have mixed feelings after seeing it.
As a movie, I feel that it kept meandering around, never finding a steady pace. I found myself wondering multiple times about sudden jumps in the story that I felt deserved more attention. It was as if the movie wants to cover as much ground as possible at the cost of the flow - even where it doesn't really contribute to the story. Some characters felt like caricatures, which made this movie feel a bit politically motivated. Despite my sympathy for the cause I think that it shouldn't dominate.
Something similar goes for the role of the music in the movie: that, too, felt rather arbitrarily chosen - apart from that brief moment where "Rhapsody in Blue" is mentioned as "new music" (though it was already a few years old by then). In this movie the music itself could have played a much more profound role, but it did so only on a few fleeting moments, as when an angry and upset Antonia hammered Stravinsky on her ramshackle piano with the neighbours yelling "Silence!!" through the walls. I don't know what Ms. Brico's favourite repertoire was, but I can't help thinking what a marvellous role a piece like the Sacre du Printemps, or maybe Alban Berg's "To the memory of an Angel" could have played.
As a movie, I feel that it kept meandering around, never finding a steady pace. I found myself wondering multiple times about sudden jumps in the story that I felt deserved more attention. It was as if the movie wants to cover as much ground as possible at the cost of the flow - even where it doesn't really contribute to the story. Some characters felt like caricatures, which made this movie feel a bit politically motivated. Despite my sympathy for the cause I think that it shouldn't dominate.
Something similar goes for the role of the music in the movie: that, too, felt rather arbitrarily chosen - apart from that brief moment where "Rhapsody in Blue" is mentioned as "new music" (though it was already a few years old by then). In this movie the music itself could have played a much more profound role, but it did so only on a few fleeting moments, as when an angry and upset Antonia hammered Stravinsky on her ramshackle piano with the neighbours yelling "Silence!!" through the walls. I don't know what Ms. Brico's favourite repertoire was, but I can't help thinking what a marvellous role a piece like the Sacre du Printemps, or maybe Alban Berg's "To the memory of an Angel" could have played.
- luthien-24639
- Jan 30, 2021
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Details
- Release date
- Countries of origin
- Official sites
- Languages
- Also known as
- Bir Kadın Zaferi
- Filming locations
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Budget
- $6,000,000 (estimated)
- Gross worldwide
- $1,211,394
- Runtime2 hours 17 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 2.38 : 1
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