A famous pianist struggling with stage fright late in his career finds inspiration with a free-spirited music critic.A famous pianist struggling with stage fright late in his career finds inspiration with a free-spirited music critic.A famous pianist struggling with stage fright late in his career finds inspiration with a free-spirited music critic.
- Photographer
- (as Victor Andres Trelles Turgeon)
- Maya
- (as Laetitia Brookes)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
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Featured reviews
What is amazing is the way music is interconnected with the story, how is not only an ambiental music, but a kind of companion and most of the time it gives a clarity to the scenes. Is like a movie inside the movie, but full of sound, full of stories, full of meaning.
This is a film that only could be the way it is: slowly, meditative, almost poetic, against the hurries and rushes from today cultural mainstream. A very beautiful and meaningful film that deserves a better qualification on IMDB, but I guess many of the reviewers doesn't understand the nuances and little twists here and there, and less about classical music, so at least they loss a half of the meaning of the movie when the doesn't get that message. I'm pretty sure that many reviewers doesn't know anything about classical music, so probably they only identifies the first piece of music when are transcurred 24 minutes, and many other pieces were played and telling things they don't understand.
So, this is not a film for people immerse on today's pop culture.
Slightly melancholic and beautifully shot, CODA is a nuanced love story that takes its time to unravel. With a classical piano soundtrack the movie switches between the Swiss alps and the streets of New York, and is inhabited by a few well fleshed out characters.
There's wonderful chemistry between Patrick Stewart and Katie Holmes and the film wouldn't have survived without it. The script has a few interesting episodes, even moments of greatness, but the deliberate slowness and tragic content of the film will turn some viewers away.
As much about love as it is about loss, CODA delivers on its promise of a gentle love story, leaving a bittersweet aftertaste and a craving for more.
Patrick Stewart brings a stillness and meditative grumpiness to the role and is supported by Katie Holmes as a writer for the New Yorker who finds herself drawn to Cole's enigmatic loss.Giancarlo Espacito (Breaking Bad) is excellent as Cole's agent, as is Christophe Gaugler as the night porter.
This is an actor's film, if you like nuance, thought, pause and Beethoven then this is rewarding. The direction by Claude Lalonde is good, particularly the pacing and framing. But this is Patrick Stewart's film, he takes Louis Gadbout's script, and delivers a beautiful performance.
This is a film about the piano and it's demands, but not in an overdramtic way, it rather questions artistry and what it means to reach the coda. This viewer enjoyed it very much and found the change of tempo a refreshing change.
Did you know
- TriviaPatrick Stewart had a body double for the close up shots of him playing piano since he has bad arthritis.
- Quotes
[opening lines]
[voiceover]
Helen Morrison: Nietzsche famously said that without music, life would be a mistake. German philosophers tend to exaggerate. But he did have a point. I know that without music my own life would've been incomplete in some fundamental way. Like if I'd had no friends or no memories. I even tried to be a pianist for a while until I realized just how fragile piano playing really is. Especially in front of 2,000 people.
- Crazy creditsChristoph Gaugler is credited twice as Felix, as the main cast as well as supporting cast.
Details
Box office
- Budget
- CA$2,800,000 (estimated)
- Gross worldwide
- $2,601,649
- Runtime1 hour 36 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.85 : 1