
CinemaSerf
7
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Oct 06, 2025
There are so many superlatives bandied about nowadays, but rarely can they be more appropriate than when describing the unique and charismatic Liza Minnelli. Born into Hollywood royalty and taking part quite enthusiastically here, we benefit from some well researched archive and some insightful contributions from friends and family alike to get a glimpse into the life of this flawed, vulnerable and talented superstar. The narrative is fairly chronological and if you’ve been at all interested in her career over the years then there is unlikely to be anything particularly revealing about what’s disclosed here. With Lorna Luft, Mia Farrow, Chita Rivera and even the perma-tanned George Hamilton having given what look like fairly comprehensive interviews, and with her own remarkable abilities to belt out a tune powerfully in her mid seventies, we get a sense that she has got well past the stage where she cares what anyone thinks. She lays her soul quite bare here as she skirts any serious critique of her relationship with her parents, or her four husbands - even if the comments on her final choice made by others can be quite prickly - and makes no apologies for her mistakes and for her far more plentiful successes. She’s lived her life under the spotlight and with that comes a wide selection of video to visually support a life story that doesn’t so much evolve as unravel. As with many documentaries, it can exasperate at times. The routines we see on stage, from the likes of “Cabaret” and her musical performances are all presented in much too brief a fashion. Did it rely on fair dealing to procure the content? What is also curious is that it doesn’t mention “Arthur” (1981) at all. This isn’t analytical and fans will find little to be offended by, but neither is it adulatory. It has a refreshing frankness to it depicting an eccentric and creative woman whose story is a real life game of snakes and ladders.