Celluloid Dreams The Directors Label

   

It’s rare that a documentary conveys an artist’s worldview so compellingly.
THE VILLAGE VOICE

It’s a contemplative piece of work that will leave you questioning the nature of what is audible—particularly those parts that ‘hearing’ people tend to tune out or ignore.
JAM MOVIES

Riedelsheimer gives the viewer not only Glennie’s music, but her own experience of it.
TORONTO STAR

A documentary that artfully blends sound, image and biography.
SALT LAKE TRIBUNE

Riedelsheimer succeeds in showing us Glennie’s world as she feels it.
LA DAILY NEWS

A feast for the senses.
NEW YORK DAILY NEWS

Arrestingly beautiful.
REEL.COM

Beautifully shot and filled with gorgeous music, but one of the most inspiring things about it is the way it erases the idea of Glennie’s deafness as a handicap
CHICAGO TRIBUNE

It’s a cliché to find inspiration in other people’s disabilities, but the truth is that Glennie would be inspiring whether she could hear or not. Her joyful enthusiasm for life is that great.
E!

A potent and imaginative creative biography of virtuoso percussionist Glennie.
THE LA TIMES

This impressionistic documentary is a mystical exploration of the sensory world as experienced by a musician who lost most of her hearing as a teenager
NEW YORK TIMES

Rewarding, thought-provoking and subtly visceral.
THE HOLLYWOOD REPORTER

Call this a profile in courage.
NEW YORK POST

-This concentration on the physical quality of sounds is a mesmerizing corroboration of Glennie’s belief that tones, timbre, and tempo are in “everything we see.”_
SLANT

It’s rare that a documentary conveys an artist’s worldview so compellingly, but then Glennie is no ordinary musician.
VILLAGE VOICE

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