Sorry, this movie sucks
SERIOUSLY. This is what the crap Hollywood still puts out?
View MoreMasterful Movie
There is, somehow, an interesting story here, as well as some good acting. There are also some good scenes
View MoreIf you were going to produce a documentary about the making of a piano, there are several directions you could go. You could produce an informative and dry blow-by-blow account, or you could do what this documentary does and provide enough technical details so as not to bore, but let the audience get to know some of the interesting people involved in the process. The Steinway numbered L1037 is a 9-foot concert grand and the movie follows its year-long production from milling the wood to final roll-out. I had assumed that the making of a piano in the 21st century would be highly automated, but the amount of handcrafting involved in making this piano surprised me. Even the number L1037 is hand stamped into the wood. Steinway turns out about 2,000 pianos a year whereas other makers turn out up to a hundred a day.As the movie follows the piano through its history we meet the craftsmen who lovingly work on it. Along the way we see people working on shaping the rim, sanding, fitting the soundboard, stringing the piano wire, finishing the wood, and tuning. When the plant lets out for the day and we see the workers heading home they look like working-class folk that you would see coming out of any manufacturing plant. But these people are highly skilled and specialized craftsmen who deal with millimeter tolerances. The recorded interviews document how devoted these workers are to their tasks and what a reverence they have for the product.A number of musicians are interviewed about their relationships with their pianos. Among these are classical pianists Hélène Grimaud, the brilliant Lang Lang, and the fussy Frenchman Pierre-Laurent Aimard. Also featured are jazz pianists Marcus Roberts, Bill Charlap, and Harry Connick, Jr. After hearing these artist talk about pianos and do some playing I came away with a much better understanding of why each Steinway piano is a unique instrument. I got a kick out of people sitting down to play a few notes only to get up and announce, "This will not do." As fascinating as it was to hear the professionals talk, the most moving scene for me involved a teenager who, having selected a piano at a Steinway sale, awaited its arrival at his apartment with his parents and grandparents. I don't think I have ever seen a person so excited about getting a possession as this young man, and there was so much happiness in the room when he played for his parents and grandparents that it brought tears to my eyes.The ending has Hélène Grimaud playing a transfixing performance of the Rachmaninov Prelude in G Sharp minor, Op.32, No. 12.I am a woodworker with an appreciation for classical piano, so I may be biased, but I found this documentary absorbing from beginning to end.
View MoreI saw this last night on Netflix streaming video. Anyone who is a musician, or who just loves piano music, would enjoy this. Or even just craftsmen who want to see this fascinating process.This was filmed in the Steinway factory in New York. I was a bit surprised at how Steinway has remained almost completely a manual process, building each and fitting each by hand, with craftsmen using chisels and other tools putting the finishing touches on parts that need to fit properly. I believe they said they make 2000 pianos a year, while other more automated piano factories make 200 pianos a day!Piano L1037 is the one followed for the almost year it takes to make it. Why so long? Well they start with raw wood, form the multi-layered sides with a mold, manual labor, glue, and clamps. So it has to sit for periods to cure, including 8 weeks in the warehouse after the sides are fully formed. Then at other points, including after stringing, the piano has to sit for periods to allow all the stretching and tons of forces inside the piano to settle in.The film also includes interviews with a number of pianists, including Harry Connick Jr, and in the end one of them is playing beautiful music on L1037 after it is complete and is transported to the Steinway facility where all the finished pianos are displayed.
View MoreThe stars of this film ought to have been the piano and the people who dedicated their lives to building it. Through very personal interviews, the workers impress us with their commitment, but they are never allowed fully to impress us with their skills. Instead, much of this already short film focuses on the end users (the pianists and their needs, opinions, tastes), on endless shots of 'L1037' (just so we know it's the same piano), and on the Steinway Building (in case we forgot where we are.) Perhaps the filmmaker felt the technical details of how a piano is made would not be compelling enough to carry the movie. Still, I was disappointed that I came away with no real understanding of what each and every worker was contributing, how all the pieces fit together, and what skills these passionate artisans bring.
View MoreThis is one of those rare films that is too short, you hope it won't end! A year in the making of a Concert Grand Steinway piano comes alive not only because of the details of the gathering of the wood, the process of building it and the beautiful tone of the finished product but because of the people who build it over that year of its birth. They show such love and enthusiasm for what they are doing and such care, respect and love for each other that it made me want to move to NYC to work at the Steinway factory. Fat chance though, the workers seem to stay there for years when they get a job there and it looks like you have to have an "in" to get the job in the first place! Friends, families, co-workers - they all count here with the gorgeous pianos bursting with tone the icing on the cake. The employees seem to know how lucky they are working in piano heaven! It's an 11 on a scale (no pun intended) of 10.I'll be buying the DVD immediately upon its release!
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