I saw the documentary on Celine Dion and it blew me away

Celine Dion at the premiere of her documentary in New York.Image: Getty

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In the documentary I am: Celine Dion to watch on Prime Video, Céline Dion reveals herself in a touching and sincere way about her life, her career and especially the illness that is gnawing at her.

Sainath Bovay

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I’m not a big Celine Dion fan although I admire her voice and am grateful to her for winning us Eurovision in 1988. I grew up hating the album Two that my mother used to play on repeat and My Heart Will Go On is, to my ears, one of the worst songs in cinema despite all the love I have for the film. Titanic.

In short, Céline Dion, for me it’s karaoke hits that we sing drunk at 11 p.m. and a character who is often an excuse for me to laugh as her outings, sometimes lunar, make me think of a sort of Jean- Claude Van Damme of the song.

However, the documentary I am: Celine Dion deeply touched me with his sincerity.

Available since Tuesday June 25 on Amazon’s Prime Video platform, this 1h42 film takes us into the star’s private life, between archive images and on-camera testimony. Celine Dion invited award-winning documentary filmmaker Irene Taylor into her daily life to shed light on her medical condition.

The director’s cameras filmed the most American of French speakers for a year in her sumptuous Las Vegas home, where she lives as a recluse in the presence of her sons, who are almost absent from the documentary.

The teaser:

Video: extern / rest

The 56-year-old Quebecer suffers from stiff person syndrome (SPS), a rare and painful neurological disease for which there is still no cure.

This autoimmune disease causes severe pain, spasms and difficulty moving as symptoms. Often confused with Parkinson’s or multiple sclerosis, this disease affects one in a million people.

Celine without makeup

The documentary I am: Celine Dion is not one of those who paint a hagiographic portrait of their subject. The images show a person who is morally and physically broken. Since discovering her illness, she is now a woman who can no longer sing or dance without risking exhaustion. The time for flamboyance is now over.

Celine Dion appears without pomp. prime video

While we were used to seeing her radiant, here she shows herself daily, without makeup, and we see that Céline Dion is a 55-year-old woman not so different from the others, with her wrinkles and her redness. A woman who bares herself and tells her story in front of the camera, between laughter and tears. A story between despair and resilience.

Celine Dion only knows how to sing. The one who started very young has devoted her life to her art. Today she is trying to tame her new voice, now hoarse by the spasms caused by her illness. Regardless of the pain and exhaustion, Céline Dion gives herself body and soul to sing again.

As we witness the recording of the soundtrack of the romantic comedy Love Again: A Little Much Passionately (2023), You can see the disappointment on her face as she listens to her voice, which is no longer quite the same. But as she says herself:

“If I can’t run, I’ll walk, and if I can’t walk, I’ll crawl.”

Such is his determination.

A traumatic scene

Irene Taylor’s documentary revolves around the artist’s daily life, interspersed with archive images. If Céline Dion sometimes takes pity on us when we see her diminished, it is above all by her resilience that she touches us, in living her life with this desire to never give up.

The documentary shows, without concessions, the violence of stiff person syndrome (SPR).

The documentary shows, without concessions, the violence of stiff person syndrome (SPR).Image: prime video

However, where the documentary feels like a punch, it is during a (very long) passage where we witness, without filter, a crisis to which the singer is a victim. As she returns with her physiotherapist from a grueling session in the studio, Céline Dion is having contractions. Her whole body stiffens and she is paralyzed, her face twisted in pain. These unbearable images, which are accompanied by the sound of her moans, will leave no spectator unscathed.

“It’s the worst thing I’ve ever filmed. I was so uncomfortable, panicked. I was all alone with the doctor and the cameraman in the room, I had headphones on and I could barely hear his breathing. It lasted for forty minutes before she regained consciousness. »

Irene Taylor, directorThe Parisian

This trying moment, on video -

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