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Diva
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The diva of the title is a famous black opera singer (Wilhelmina Wiggins-Fernandez) who steadfastly refuses to be recorded. The singer is idolized by young French mail-carrier Jules (Frederic Andrei), who sneaks a tape recorder into the theater and records her performance. This is witnessed by a pair of Taiwanese criminals, who unlike Andrei wish to profit from the bootlegged recording. They begin to pursue the boy, as do a couple of home-grown hooligans who believe that Jules is in possession of some murder evidence. The serpentine plot leads to a warm friendship between Jules and the reclusive diva - and to a brilliantly photographed (by Philipe Rousselot) motorcycle chase through the subway tunnels of Paris. Diva marked the directorial debut of Jean-Jacques Beineix, whose obvious fondness for the more esoteric techniques of the Nouvelle Vague never impedes his willingness to simply entertain his audiences. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
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unclefesteringunclefestering The power of a voice and the po ...
by unclefestering in unclefestering Blog
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"Diva is a great film. It has everything you could want: action, romance, corrupt cops, honorable thieves and plenty of setbacks to be overcome. This stylish thriller from the early 80s reset what a person could expect from a French film and introduced the cinema du look. An opera star is afraid of losing her voice but unwilling to be recorded. A young Parisian messenger boy manages to sneak a high quality recording device into one of her performances. A group of Taiwanese recording executives become aware of the tapes existence and begin to hunt the messenger down. In the meantime, a prostitute manages to drop a recording of her confession against a corrupt police official into the messenger’s bag just before she is killed. Poor Jules is being hunted for two recordings, but only knows about one. Fortunately, he is aided by a young, Vietnamese shoplifter who has her own connections to shady characters. There is a great chase scene on a motorcycle in the subway. And Jules is ... " [More]
Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
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A stunning debut for director Jean-Jacques Beineix, Diva is a pulsating, eccentric slice of post-modernism. Shocking to many audiences, Diva blends violence, wit and punk style in a manner that later would be appropriated by Quentin Tarantino and other admirers of updated, jazzed-up film noir. The plot concerns a black Parisian soprano, some recording pirates who want to profit from her voice, corrupt policemen and a chief who runs a prostitution ring, and other seedy scenarios. More important than any of this is the frenzied, bold atmospherics, aided by an eclectic sound track. Cinematographer Philippe Rousselot's work earned him several critics' awards. Beneix failed to live up to the dazzling promise shown in Diva, a film whose attitude was widely imitated in the rest of the 1980s and the 1990s. ~ Michael Betzold, All Movie Guide
 



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