![]() I also have the original Diva song from the movie for a comparison. The most noticeable drawback to this presentation is its softness. Following such fair-to-dreadful discs as The Fifth Element, xXx and 50 First Dates, Im really getting a bit discouraged with Sonys first wave of Blu-ray titles. However, this Opera singer below nearly nails it. Hitch is another strikeout for Blu-ray, with a subpar transfer that I really expected to be a lot better. So until now it would seem that the Diva song is quite literally impossible to sing. So I purposely wrote un-singable things, some too low, some too high, sentences that were too fast, I would then arrange it with the sampler. For the scene to work, we needed her to sound like an alien, thereforee we had to create notes that no human could sing. Today she is in the world’s top ten sopranos. When the scene is shot she is a young talented soprano, yet her agent was Maria Callas’ one too, showing, if need to be, that she was already a promising artist. In that scene Maïwenn plays the diva but the voice is not hers, it is the one of a true opera singer, the Albanian Inva Mula. In the colorful future, a cab driver unwittingly becomes the central figure in the search for a legendary cosmic weapon to keep Evil and Mr. ![]() This is a story told by Eric Serra Eric Serra tells about the notorious diva scene played by his girlfriend at the time Maïwenn, and of which he composed the music. While much of the song is sung by a real opera singer there are actually notes in there that human beings can’t actually reach. Remember Diva Plavalaguna from The Fifth Element? Remember how amazing her voice was, not to mention her range? There’s actually a story behind the song because it isn’t 100% what it seems.
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