Thursday, May 13, 2010

Download Celine: Through the Eyes of the World (2010)

Celine: Through the Eyes of the World (2010)
Country: USA
Genre: Documentary / Music
Direction: Stephane Laporte
Cast: Celine Dion

Celine: Through the Eyes of the World will bring Celine Dion's 2008-2009 Taking Chances World Tour to theaters. This event gives Dion fans who attended the extremely popular tour - which placed Dion second only to Madonna in ticket sales in 2008 - another chance to experience the magical event, this time from a vantage point unparalleled by any ticket.


Download Celine: Through the Eyes of the World (2010)

Movie Review:

As anyone with a passing knowledge of Celine Dion's lung-busting ballads could guess, a finely cultivated sense of irony is not among her many gifts. Even so, it's hard to fathom the lack of self-awareness that went into calling the worldwide jaunt documented in "Celine: Through the Eyes of the World" the "Taking Chances" tour.

A breezy, briskly edited chronicle of Dion's 2008 tour, Stephane Laporte's mild hagiography crams a few timid peeks behind the scenes of her elaborately choreographed spectacle between concert snippets and gushing fan testimonials. But rather than capturing a restless star pushing at her own boundaries, "Through the Eyes of the World" finds Dion sitting pretty, on top of the world and happy to stay there.

The movie's subtitle, as well as an expansive itinerary that takes the crew from Cape Town, South Africa, to Shanghai, makes an argument for Dion as a global figure. Cross-cut concert scenes meld together audiences from Omaha, Neb., and Seoul, South Korea, united in their adulation of Dion's matchless voice. The film makes sure to show Dion stepping off the campaign trail to visit Nazi concentration camps and Nelson Mandela's island prison, but it has little interest in her fans beyond their florid encomia. In Dubai, Laporte trains his camera on a Muslim woman whose comments are edited down to a damp squib: "I love her and I love all her songs."

The offstage goings-on are hardly more enlightening. Dion, we learn, is a closet cut-up who likes pulling funny faces, is kind to her dancers and loves to spend time with husband-manager Rene Angelil and their son, Rene-Charles. Strained vocal chords provide a few moments of suspense toward the end of the film but, for the most part, the pressing crises involve whether Dion will pick a new dress to be part of her stage wardrobe.

Screening eight times over the course of a week and a half, "Through the Eyes of the World" is intended to whet appetites for Dion's coming tour, its abrupt ending serving as a setup for the imminent sequel. But although there's ample opportunity for Dion to show off her seamless multioctave range, few songs are presented from start to finish, and those that are lack any hint of live ambience. Some concert movies make you feel like you have the best seat in the house; this one plants you squarely in front of the JumboTron.

Original article 

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