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 Location:  Home » Children's Movies » General » Bizet - Carmen / Domashenko, Berti, Aceto, Dashuk, Pastorello, Josipovic, Lombard, Verona OperaDecember 3, 2008  
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Bizet - Carmen / Domashenko, Berti, Aceto, Dashuk, Pastorello, Josipovic, Lombard, Verona Opera
Bizet - Carmen / Domashenko, Berti, Aceto, Dashuk, Pastorello, Josipovic, Lombard, Verona Opera
Actors: Raymond Aceto, Marina Domashenko, Maya Dashuk, Marco Berti, Zeffirelli
Studio: Tdk DVD Video
Category: DVD

List Price: $29.99
Buy New: $18.99
You Save: $11.00 (37%)
Buy New/Used/Collectible from $18.34

Avg. Customer Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars(4 reviews)
Sales Rank: 84958

Format: Classical, Color, Dts Surround Sound, Dvd-video, Widescreen, Ntsc
Languages: French (Original Language), English (Subtitled), French (Subtitled), French (Dubbed)
Rating: NR (Not Rated)
Media: DVD
Running Time: 150 minutes
Number Of Items: 2
Aspect Ratio: 1.77:1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2
Dimensions (in): 7.1 x 5.4 x 0.6

MPN: OPCAR
UPC: 824121000608
EAN: 0824121000608
ASIN: B0001VLUV6

Release Date: August 17, 2004
Theatrical Release Date: 2003
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

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Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars Carmen Rocks.Michaela Hot!   July 30, 2005
  14 out of 16 found this review helpful

I own two other Carmen operas. The one filmed by Zefferelli that is a movie,which has Domingo is really a 5 star Carmen. This one was stage filmed by Zefferelli and is just as good. Carmen is sassy and better costumed than the other one. Michaela is beautiful and I can't really believe gets dumped for Carmen,however that is how the story goes. French with English subtitles. Great audio. Great dancing and costuming. Worth the purchase indeed. 5 stars easy. I also bought this after I read the J Scott Morrison review. He has fine taste in opera.Don't forget to also purchase the Carmen with Domingo. You won't get tired of several Carmens and they both stand as 5 stars each.


5 out of 5 stars Una Carmen esplendida.   July 4, 2005
  7 out of 10 found this review helpful

La produccion de esta version de Carmen es casi perfecta. La puesta en escena es preciosa, cada escenario es ademas realistas. Un detalle que debio cuidarse, el cigarrillo con filtro que la gitana prende para Zuniga.
Los cantantes, con excepcion de Zuniga, se desempenan a gran nivel. Domashenko es una Carmen que teniendo y luciendo una voz estupenda, ademas descuella por su extraordinaria belleza y por un dominio de escena espectacular. Sabe usar su risa esplendida, sus ojos preciosos y su gracioso cuerpo para cautivar no solo a Don Jose y Escamillo, sino que al espectador. Ah, y un detalle convincente mas, tambien sabe usar, y con gracia, las castanuelas. La Micaela de Dashuk, igualmente me parecio excelente: otra mujer joven y de gran belleza, aunque distinta de la de Damashenko que es mucho mas sensual, con una estupenda voz y que le da al personaje una personalidad distinta de la acostumbrada pero sin dejar de trasmitir la pureza conque fue concebido. Berti en el papel de Don Jose luce su timbre y canta con gran heroicidad y pathos. Habria que aconsejarle eso si que baje de peso y pedirle mas seguridad en lo que se refiere a la coordinacion con el director. Aceto canta adecuadamente el papel de Escamillo, aunque francamente su figura nada tiene que ver con la de un torero. Los cantantes comprimarios cantan en forma muy adecuada, con la excepcion ya senalada del Zuniga de Berni, que es espantoso. Menos mal que su papel es tan secundario que no alcanza a afectar el nivel general de la presentacion.
Alain Lombard consigue una respuesta adecuada de la orquesta, aun cuando a veces los tempi que impone no son los mas adecuados.
Las coreografias son estupendas. El colorido maravilloso.
En resumen, una Carmen que se goza intensamente.



3 out of 5 stars Grand Opera Taken To the Extreme   May 3, 2005
  13 out of 14 found this review helpful

Dozens of people sharing the stage with horses and donkeys. If you like big shows with lots of extras and distracting (and loud) unnecessary business, this DVD is for you. Grand opera calls for spectacle, yes, but there are moments when everyone should exit the stage and leave the principals alone. There is, after all, a story to tell. I have actually enjoyed other Zeffirelli circus-like productions in the past for what they are, but this time he's outdone his gaudy self.
Marina Domashenko as Carmen is the best of the performers. Her French is a bit blurry but her singing is of the highest order and her voice is a true mezzo with a pleasant color. I enjoyed her acting the most. She is a very attractive woman, which helps, but most importantly she knows how to use her body and, in particular, her eyes. I would go as far as saying her acting might make this the most accomplished and consistent rendition of this role on video - closely matched by Von Otter on her Carmen DVD. To complement the madonna/loose woman dichotomy (amazon doesn't allow the "w" word) we have the Micaela of Maya Dashuk, angelic in looks but sadly not in sound. Unsteady timbre and a highly acidic quality in her voice that at times borders on shrieking mar her performance. I know it is very wrong to even bring this up, but I couldn't help thinking Marco Berti as Don Jose was probably cast last-minute to replace the strapping bare-chested youth Zeffirelli had in mind. He just doesn't physically fit the mold of principals cast in recent Zeffirelli productions. That said, he sings adequately. On video, up close, it is very distracting to see him constantly look at the conductor in the middle of a passionate moment. All opera performers have to learn to negotiate this necessary task with their acting - Berti does not seem to even try. Escamillo and the rest of the performers are ok, nothing in particular makes them stand out either way except for the horribly hollow-voiced Zuniga of Dario Berini.
The musical direction under Alain Lombard is beyond reproach. The video direction is actually pretty successful considering there is so much going on all of the time that it must have been quite a task to edit this release and decide what to show at any given moment. The sound is quite good although sometimes there is a drop in the volume of the voices (particularly noticeable during Escamillo's entrance). Subtitles are available in English, French, Spanish, and Italian. Even though they put this out on two discs there are no extras at all. For a more inspired (and better choreographed) production, check out the Von Otter DVD from Glyndebourne. A more manageable grand opera take is to be found in the Met DVD featuring Baltsa and Carreras. I wouldn't discard the Ewing releases either - the Covent Garden Mehta with Lima and Vaduva being the most recommendable of the two. Any of the Carmens just mentioned will probably be more satisfactory than this Verona 2003 release.



5 out of 5 stars A Dramatically Riveting World-Class Production of 'Carmen'   September 13, 2004
  35 out of 37 found this review helpful

This 2 DVD set was made at a July 2003 Verona Arena performance of 'Carmen' staged by Franco Zeffirelli starring mostly young, attractive, not-well-known singers in an overtly video-friendly production. Lots of close-ups, lots of camera movement, lots of excitement onstage both from the expert video direction by George Blume and from Zeffirelli's always animated direction. Costumes and scenery are lavish and even in close-up look almost real. It's a fairly traditional production with a few unique touches. And at least one anachronism: when Zuniga, at the end of Act II, is bound and blindfolded by the gypsies, one of the women lights a cigarette for him and it's a filter-tip!

Musical direction is by the veteran French conductor, Alain Lombard. He makes a few odd choices of tempi (as in the entr'acte between Acts I & II) but overall this is a neatly shaped performance, a little on the fast side but which slows down to allow for the overt eroticism of the performances of both Carmen (Russian mezzo Marina Domashenko, a movie-star beautiful woman in her late 20s) and the swaggering Escamillo (American bass-baritone, Raymond Aceto, a hunk and the possessor of the best French accent in the cast). Domashenko has a lushly beautiful and very well-managed voice with just enough edge to give her Carmen more than a touch of menace. Aceto has an attractive voice, and his acting is quite good, but he sometimes, particularly during his entrance aria, sings just a hair behind the beat. The earnest Don Jose is sung by Italian tenor Marco Berti, who has the vocal heft and squillo for this demanding role but can sing tenderly, as in his scenes with Micaela. (He does, however, like most tenors these days, sing the final upward scale of the Flower Song with a crescendo, ignoring Bizet's careful instruction to end it softly.) During the finale of Act III and the confrontation outside the corrida in Act IV he sings with dramatic fire and the voice rings out heroically. Micaela is sung by Russian soprano Maya Dashuk, another stunningly beautiful young woman with a purely produced lyrical sound. She has a larger voice than most Micaelas of my experience, and consequently during her aria in Act III, 'Je dis, que rien ne m'epouvante,' and the duet that follows, she comes across as not just some simple country girl, but a young woman with more spunk than is generally given the character. I frankly rather liked that; I always recall Beverly Sills once saying in a broadcast interview that Micaela is the second-most passive soprano role in the repertoire (Elsa, in 'Lohengrin,' taking the prize in that category), but she doesn't seem so passive here, and after all she did climb those mountains to find Don Jose in the smugglers' lair and bring him home to his dying mother. This Micaela is not simply a cipher with two lovely bits to sing.

The secondary roles are mostly well-taken. Dancairo (Marco Camastra) and Remendado (Antonio Feltracco) have distinctive voices and play well off each other. Frasquita (Cristina Pastorello) and Mercedes (Milena Josipovic) more than hold their own with Carmen in the Card Trio in Act III. The only weak singer among the cast is the fellow who sang Zuniga. I was glad that he passed from the scene at the end of Act II, filter-tip and all.

In summary, then, this is a very attractive performance with world-class production values, believable singing actors, almost all with excellent voices. It does not compare directly with Zeffirelli's and Francesco Rosi's 1984 film of the opera with Placido Domingo and Julia Migenes in the starring roles; that production was 'opened up' and conveys much more of the story's 'blood and sand' than is possible in a staged production. The film replaces the familiar Guiraud recitatives with the original spoken French dialog; the recitatives are mostly retained in the present production. I have not seen any of the other DVDs of 'Carmen' that are available and thus cannot make any comparisons with them.

I thoroughly enjoyed this DVD, found the drama to be riveting and the musical presentation on a par with any I've ever encountered. Recommended.

TT=150 mins, 2 DVDs

Scott Morrison


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