IMDb RATING
7.2/10
4.3K
YOUR RATING
The film covers the breadth of her extraordinary life through intimate interviews with Stewart herself, who opened up her personal archives to share never-before-seen photos, letters, and di... Read allThe film covers the breadth of her extraordinary life through intimate interviews with Stewart herself, who opened up her personal archives to share never-before-seen photos, letters, and diary entries.The film covers the breadth of her extraordinary life through intimate interviews with Stewart herself, who opened up her personal archives to share never-before-seen photos, letters, and diary entries.
- Nominated for 2 Primetime Emmys
- 1 win & 4 nominations total
Dan Abrams
- Self
- (archive footage)
Lloyd Allen
- Self
- (archive sound)
Maria Bartiromo
- Self
- (archive footage)
Lewis Black
- Self
- (archive footage)
Tom Brokaw
- Self
- (archive footage)
Rita Christiansen
- Self
- (archive sound)
Jane Clayson
- Self
- (archive footage)
James Comey
- Self
- (archive footage)
Joan Crawford
- Mildred Pierce
- (archive footage)
Simon Crittle
- Self
- (archive sound)
John R. Cuti
- Self
- (archive sound)
Pete Davidson
- Self
- (archive footage)
Kathryn Evans
- Self
- (archive sound)
Caitlin Flanagan
- Self
- (archive sound)
Carol Gilbert
- Self
- (archive sound)
Melanie Griffith
- Self
- (archive footage)
Featured reviews
I'm close to Martha's age and have watched her for years. Her TV shows and magazines don't reveal how picky she is and how gripey she comes across. This documentary does. I see why her husband left and it must be hard for her to keep her staffs. She doles out constant criticism. Nobody else can do anything right. Everything has to be her way or else. OMG That would get old.
I remember when she was found guilty and sent to prison. Media made such a big deal over her expensive purse but no mention of the attorneys wearing expensive suits etc. She did wrong but many have done much worse and never seen the inside of a prison.
I remember when she was found guilty and sent to prison. Media made such a big deal over her expensive purse but no mention of the attorneys wearing expensive suits etc. She did wrong but many have done much worse and never seen the inside of a prison.
To be fair, despite Martha Stewart's own public criticism of this documentary, this is the most positive, humanizing depiction of her on film.
I'm not a fan but, as a woman, I admire her determination and gumption. At the same time, I can also confirm her behind-the-scenes bad behaviour towards staff, from friends who worked with/for her. But tell me a person in power who doesn't act like a d*ck, because I haven't met one yet.
Still, Martha comes away from this rather likeable and oddly relatable as a human being. And that's a good thing.
Mariana Pasternak, her so-called friend, betraying her to the FBI was so crap.
Here's hoping Martha kicked her to the curb.
I'm not a fan but, as a woman, I admire her determination and gumption. At the same time, I can also confirm her behind-the-scenes bad behaviour towards staff, from friends who worked with/for her. But tell me a person in power who doesn't act like a d*ck, because I haven't met one yet.
Still, Martha comes away from this rather likeable and oddly relatable as a human being. And that's a good thing.
Mariana Pasternak, her so-called friend, betraying her to the FBI was so crap.
Here's hoping Martha kicked her to the curb.
Somehow I don't find it surprising that Martha Stewart complained publicly to no less than the New York Times about the final cut of the 2024 documentary about her life even though she fully cooperated with longtime documentarian R. J. Cutler on the production. After all, she is a legendary perfectionist who changed the fabric of American lifestyle culture and became the country's first self-made female billionaire. She was appalled that a big chunk of the film was devoted to her conviction and 150-day imprisonment two decades ago (including a day in solitary confinement for what seemed to be a minor infraction), yet this section (replete with illustrations) was the most compelling part of her story. Cutler does a masterful job covering her life, triggering Stewart to discuss aspects of her childhood, marriage, relationships, and business dealings that reveal the price she has paid for her perfectionism. Her life since prison has been an intriguing example of reinvention with unexpected notoriety that has proven fortuitous to her enduring brand. She is truly brilliant but with that detached sense of entitlement that still limits how much of her story she is willing to share even now. This documentary provides clear evidence what a fascinating life Stewart has led due in no small part to her unflinching tenacity and almost telepathic sense of what her audience wants.
I really enjoyed the documentary. For someone who knows of Martha, and didn't get her or what the big deal was about her, I now get it. When you put it like that, into one whole life review I get it. She's incredibly inspirational especially to women thinking of starting a business in a world that let's face it is still a man's world. So I found her life incredibly inspiring. I gave only 8 stars because I would have liked to see and know more about the early stages of writing a cook book, building the business and really getting into the detail of how she fitted so much into her day. Her life seems a little bit handed to her because of the people she was surrounded with. Is that why possibly we didn't go more in detail? I do see this being a series on streaming. I think find the right Martha and let's get into her life from young, to teen, modeling, marriage, family divorce, all the while building her empire from recipes, to magazine, TV, the deals, the hurts, successes, the affairs, the jail time. I think it could be a really binge watching series. But let Martha pick her actress!
This was hard for me to watch. It was void of goodness and much more about ego. Ego ego ego. It's sad because living as a perfectionist and void of true joy is what I felt in watching it. I can admire intelligence in the business world but Martha seems to live without almost any true emotional intelligence. I don't know. I hate to say that but it's my take. It was a pretty sad story and I can only imagine how people were treated along the way.
As far as the documentary. It was pretty cheesy to have friends and people who knew her speaking but not able to see them. It just added to the coldness.
As far as the documentary. It was pretty cheesy to have friends and people who knew her speaking but not able to see them. It just added to the coldness.
Did you know
- TriviaMartha Stewart stated she was upset and shocked with the final result, saying the director had total access to her archive but really used very little. She also revealed she tried to get some of the last scenes that director RJ Cutler included in the film thrown out as she had ruptured her Achilles' tendon was limping at the time they were filmed but Cutler refused. She also asked for a score with rap music, like Dr. Dre, Snoop Dogg or Fredwreck, but the director opted for classical score which she dubbed "lousy".
- Quotes
Martha Stewart: I look at a problem. look at it and try to solve it.
- ConnectionsReferenced in The Neighborhood: Welcome to the Yippedy-Dip (2025)
Details
- Runtime
- 1h 55m(115 min)
- Color
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