FindKey

FindKeyは、100万件を超える映画・ドラマ作品、そして数百万人の人物データと独自の16類型CTI診断を統合した、日本初の感情特化型映画レコメンドエンジンです。

Find (見つける) + Key (鍵・正解)

映画に限らず、人生のヒントを見つける場所です。

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マエストロ: その音楽と愛と
マエストロ: その音楽と愛と

マエストロ: その音楽と愛と

20232h 9m★ 6.3ドラマロマンス音楽

あらすじ

音楽界の伝説的存在であるレナード・バーンスタインとフェリシア・モンテアレグレ・コーン・バーンスタインがともに歩んだ生涯を振り返る。紆余(うよ)曲折に満ちた、大胆かつ情熱的な愛の物語。

作品考察・見どころ

レナード・バーンスタインの激動を、ブラッドレイ・クーパーが驚異的な演技で体現しています。変容する映像美は彼の高揚と孤独を可視化し、指揮棒一本で世界を揺らす熱量が画面から溢れ出します。音楽を奏でることと人を愛することが同義であるという、芸術家の業を美しくも残酷に描き切った手腕は圧巻です。 本作の本質は、妻フェリシアとの魂の共鳴にあります。キャリー・マリガンの静謐かつ力強い演技は、献身だけでは語れない愛の深淵を突きつけます。二人が辿り着く沈黙の瞬間こそが、どの名曲よりも雄弁に人生を語っています。音楽映画の枠を超えた、魂を揺さぶる究極の叙事詩です。

興行成績

製作費: $80,000,000 (120億円)

興行収入: $300,000 (0億円)

推定収支: $-79,700,000 (-120億円)

※製作費・興行収入はTMDBのデータを参照しています。収支は(興行収入 - 製作費)で算出したFindKey独自の推定値であり、広告宣伝費や諸経費は含まれません (1ドル=150円換算)。

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特集レポート

FindKeyのエディトリアルチームがこの作品の深層や歴史を解説しています。

五感を揺さぶる至高の週末を。感性を研ぎ澄ます「アートと音楽」の傑作案内

FindKey Editorial2026/1/27

キャスト

キャリー・マリガン
キャリー・マリガン
Felicia Montealegre
ブラッドレイ・クーパー
ブラッドレイ・クーパー
Leonard Bernstein
マット・ボマー
マット・ボマー
David Oppenheim
Vincenzo Amato
Vincenzo Amato
Bruno Zirato
Greg Hildreth
Greg Hildreth
Isaac
マイケル・ユーリー
マイケル・ユーリー
Jerry Robbins
Brian Klugman
Brian Klugman
Aaron Copeland
Nick Blaemire
Nick Blaemire
Adolph Green
Mallory Portnoy
Mallory Portnoy
Betty Comden
No Image
Alexandra Santini
Claudio's Guest #1

スタッフ・制作会社

監督: ブラッドレイ・クーパー

脚本: ジョシュ・シンガー / ブラッドレイ・クーパー

音楽: Leonard Bernstein

制作: ジョシュ・シンガー / Bobby Wilhelm / トレイシー・ランドン

撮影監督: マシュー・リバティーク

制作会社: Amblin Entertainment / Fred Berner Films / Sikelia Productions / Lea Pictures

TMDB ユーザーのレビュー

Manuel São Bento
Manuel São Bento
★ 8

FULL SPOILER-FREE REVIEW @ https://fandomwire.com/maestro-venice-film-festival-review-bradley-cooper-is-a-certified-talented-filmmaker/ "Maestro exceeds expectations, certifying Bradley Cooper as a filmmaker with innate talent, just like Leonard Bernstein, who the former portrays brilliantly. An inspirational biopic focused on an exponentially compelling romance elevated by emotionally genuine performances filled with intensely, passionately authentic interactions. Carey Mulligan joins the actor/director in the race for awards with a remarkable, spectacular display that will bring tears to even less sensitive viewers. Technically sublime, the conductor's music induces many chills in the audience through a story about love, family, artistic passion, and all the obstacles and dilemmas that arise from them." Rating: A-

CinemaSerf
CinemaSerf
★ 6

I don't know if maybe "Bohemian Rhapsody" (2018) or "Rocketman" (2019) have made me a bit immune to the rather hedonistic lifestyles of the musical rich and famous, but I found this beautifully photographed depiction of the life of the enigmatic Leonard Bernstein to be remarkably tame. The monochrome presentation is glorious to look at, but the narrative is weak, I found. Carey Mullian, his long-suffering wife Felicia Montealegre is easily the most meritorious of praise here. She portrays the increasingly frustrated, betrayed yet still loving woman with a strength and subtlety that is really engaging - especially towards the end of the film. Cooper, on the other hand - well, was he meant to be mimicking Barry Manilow or Tony Bennett? We learn very little about what made the man tick, about what made his sexuality such a big deal for him? The other characters come and go with little context to illustrate their roles in his life, his role in their's and with the possible exception of their eldest daughter Shirley (Sarah Silverman) there is no conversation to be had about just how this marriage of convenience was established or managed. It's also largely devoid of his most famous musical works. Aside from the tiniest interlude from "West Side Story" - which I know he didn't much care for - we could be forgiven for assuming that this was a biopic of a composer with high-brow classical aspirations but with little popular appeal. That said, there is a splendid rendition of Mahler's 2nd from the acoustically gorgeous Ely cathedral to savour, but otherwise this is all a rather underwhelming melodrama that really didn't tell me much that I didn't already know about this charismatic, selfish and flawed individual the fluctuating state of whose marriage was, frankly, of very little interest to me. More marital woes than maestro, sorry.

Brent Marchant
Brent Marchant
★ 5

A great talent deserves a great biopic. Regrettably, in the case of the late conductor/composer/musician Leonard Bernstein, he doesn’t get it. Writer-actor-director Bradley Cooper has made a film that I’m sure he thinks of as his cinematic masterpiece when, in fact, it comes across more like a tribute to the filmmaker’s own ego than as an homage to his subject. Perhaps the biggest problem here is the screenplay, which can never really decide if it wants to be a litany of the accomplishments of the artist (Cooper) or a love story between him and his adoring wife, Felicia (Carey Mulligan). The constant switching back and forth between the two leaves viewers wondering which will be the focus that the director settles on. Then there’s Cooper’s increasingly hammy overacting, which grows progressively annoying as the film plays out, a performance riddled with knowing looks of “I know I’m going to get awards nominations for this portrayal.” Add to that a somewhat inexplicable shift from monochrome to color cinematography, and audiences are left further pondering the filmmaker’s cinematic motivations while simultaneously having to contend with notably underdeveloped depictions of the character’s motivations, making for a rather shallow take overall when it comes to exploring the protagonist’s nature. To its credit, “Maestro” features a fine production design and gorgeous camera work (especially in the black-and-white sequences), and Mulligan’s luminescent presence is positively captivating, in my view the only real reason for screening this offering in the first place. Otherwise, however, this is a big awards season disappointment that leaves much to be desired – and that likely would have been better off left in the hands of the project’s originally designated director, Steven Spielberg. Cooper may be a fine actor, but that’s what he should stick with, as that’s where his real strength lies – not behind the camera or sitting in the writer’s chair.

BornKnight
BornKnight
★ 7

This biographical movie about Leonard Bernstein is directed and written by Bradley Cooper (and Josh Singer - “Spotlight”) and produced between others by Martin Scorsese (that declined to direct it after seeing “A Star is Born” and to be able to film the Irishman) and Steven Spielberg. It stars Bradley Cooper as Leonard Bernstein an Jew American conductor and composer (1918–1990) and Carey Mulligan as Felicia Montealegre Bernstein American actress (1922–1978) who married Lenny in 1951, by social convenience of that epoch. Leonard Bernstein had a brilliant career playing in Broadway (West Side Story is by him), Carnegie Hall and New York Philharmonic and had also an intense career on teaching, having intense presentations that showed his true love for music - it was also a controverse person, with a very active social live and gay. Not shown in the movie, that he holds a cigar in almost every scene we had asthma (being dismissed in WWII) developed emphysema, dying from a heart attack from a mesothelioma tumor. Felicia Montealegre Bernstein was a Jew actress from Chilean origins that met Leonard while at a party in 1946 - it was also a true love into Leonard's life, even with his sexual orientation, living a sometimes contributed second life. The story of the movie show marks at the live on the musician, and the cinematography by Matthew Libatique behind the camera (A Star is Born, Pi, Fountain of Life, Mother!Requiem for a Dream), shown the ages were the story passed is the cinematographic style and format of those epochs from the 40’s to the 90’s from high-contrast black and white and Academy ratio, to 70 technicolor format eras where it passes, using original equipment for those scenes. Also the scenes of the movie that place great emphasis depending on the dramatic moment - from dialogues and close ups, to discussions and background happenings to the magnificent performances of Bradley Cooper as Leny as maestro, including a memorable scene at a church. The edition of the movie by Michelle Tesoro (The Queen's Gambit) is very well done, and the music is all works of Leonard Bernstein (not sure if it can be a contender of this year's Academy nominations). Another remarkable work is the The movie can be another one of NF gems that comes to the oscar consolidating streaming as a real parallel form of art to classic cinema - I can foresee and nomination to best actor, best co-adjuvant actress, best cinematography and maybe on production, because the makeup and prosthetic work of Kazu Hiro is just amazing life-like, and true to both the physical and psychological side of Leny. The story of the movie itself could be better in showing better the intimacy between the two, and also some facts left aside as the work of both of them as fierce activists for several causes. The story rhythm is also a bit confuse as it make jumps to the relevant points and do not stay till the end of something predictable but lingering and meaningful (as Felicica’s death, show only as a son running to the backyard the moving of the family from the house) Brit is a solid biographical movie and one of the ”must watch” movies of the year deserving a solid 7.5 out of 10.0 / B+ only because of its lesser faults.

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