Magical Universe

Magical Universe
Directed by Jeremy Workman
Produced by
  • Jeremy Workman
  • Robert J. Lyons
Starring
Music by Karen Altman
Cinematography
  • Jeremy Workman
  • John Atherton Monroe
  • James G. Colston
  • Michael Lisnet
Edited by
  • Jeremy Workman
Distributed by IFC Films
Release dates
  • October 31, 2014 (2014-10-31) (Theatrical and digital)
Running time
77 minutes
Country United States
Language English

Magical Universe is a 2014 documentary film directed by filmmaker Jeremy Workman about reclusive outsider artist Al Carbee who created elaborate dioramas and collages featuring Barbie dolls. The title of the film is taken from Carbee's own voluminous writings about his wondrous art.

The film grew out of Workman's 2002 short film Carbee's Barbies and encompasses the final years of Carbee's life, at which point Workman became Carbee's closest friend and his only link to the outside world.

First presented at numerous film festivals, Magical Universe was released theatrically on October 31, 2014 with IFC FIlms.[1]

Synopsis

Al Carbee is a true American original. An 88-year-old recluse living in Maine, he devotes nearly all his time to creating extraordinarily elaborate works of art from Barbie dolls. This captivating documentary, filmed over the course of the director's decade-long friendship with the artist, goes inside the mind of the enigmatic Carbee to reveal his rich, wondrous, and sometimes heart-wrenching inner-life. An eye-opening portrait of an all but unknown artist and an inspiring testament to the triumph of the creative spirit, Magical Universe is a moving tribute to a one-of-a-kind visionary.

Release

After winning several film festival awards,[2] Magical Universe was acquired by theatrical distributors IFC Films and was released in theaters on October 31, 2014.[3] It was subsequently made available on Netflix in May 2015.[4]

In the summer of 2016, Magical Universe was featured at the Musée des Arts Décoratifs, Paris at the Louvre as part of their Barbie exhibit.[5]

Critical response

Magical Universe has a 7.6 Rating on IMDB[6] and 68% positive rating on Rotten Tomatoes.[7] In the Los Angeles Times, Michael Rechtshaffen described the film as an "whimsical... affectionate...A tender portrait of the artist as a weirdly gifted, wildly prolific, and strange man" and made the film a Los Angeles Times Critic's Pick.[8] Lauren Wissot of Filmmaker Magazine suggested that the film is "crafted in a style that brings us practically inside the brain of the 88-year old outsider artist."[9] And during the film's theatrical run in New York City, the Village Voice made it a Critics Pick with film critic Abby Garnett saying that Workman "captures the poignancy of Carbee's drive to create ideal images...This story is about tenderness and empathy."[10]

Awards

See also

Documentary films about outsider artists:

References

External links

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