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SummaryThis is a journey inside Celine Dion's life as she reveals her battle with Stiff Person Syndrome.

Directed By:Irene Taylor

I Am: Celine Dion

Metascore
Generally Favorable
76
User score
Generally Favorable
7.7
My Score
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Metascore
Generally Favorable
100% Positive
12 Reviews
0% Mixed
0 Reviews
0% Negative
0 Reviews
  • All Reviews
  • Positive Reviews
  • Mixed Reviews
  • Negative Reviews
Jun 25, 2024
100
The A.V. Club
The documentary, taking its cue from Dion, is not merely looking backward; there’s a path ahead. What exactly that looks like is, as it turns out, being negotiated as the documentary unfolds.
Jun 24, 2024
83
IndieWire
This is a rare nonfiction chronicle of an artist that also avoids hagiography — we see Dion at her lowest because that becomes the reminder of who she is at her very best.
User score
Generally Favorable
81% Positive
35 Ratings
7% Mixed
3 Ratings
12% Negative
5 Ratings
  • All Reviews
  • Positive Reviews
  • Mixed Reviews
  • Negative Reviews
Jul 27, 2024
10
TheBaldReviewer
A very moving documentary that show us the most vulnerable side of the great diva.
Jun 28, 2024
10
Katiek95
This was everything and so so so much more. So confronting, but so powerful, moving, inspiring and beautiful. A testament to celine!
Jun 20, 2024
80
The Guardian
[A] remarkably unguarded documentary.
Jun 24, 2024
75
Washington Post
The film documents how Dion has remained a pop culture fixture in the past decade, from appearances on late night shows to a music video with Deadpool.
Jun 27, 2024
70
New York Magazine (Vulture)
The film lands somewhere between hand-holding fan service and brutal portrait of chronic illness.
Jun 21, 2024
70
The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
At its worst, the film is an homage to Dion’s presented indomitability. At its best, it serves as a compelling portrait of a powerhouse performer’s lifeblood love of stage and audience.
Jun 25, 2024
65
TheWrap
Although this single-minded existence will fascinate and inspire devotees, anyone new to the details of her life is likely to be left wanting more. Even so, all will be moved by the honest approach Dion and Taylor take towards her illness.
See All 12 Critic Reviews
Jun 28, 2024
10
Maicool4
Céline Dion is simply iconic. This documentary represents how majestic her career is, but also who she is as a human being. An extraordinary, humble and inspiring woman. After watching this documentary the world will never see Celine the same again. Not because of his illness but because of his impeccable life and legacy.
Jun 25, 2024
10
cameroned_
Speechless! This documentary showed Céline Dion's dedication to her family, her music and her fans.
Jun 25, 2024
10
AlexDio
[SPOILER ALERT: This review contains spoilers.]
Jun 25, 2024
10
MartinDion44
A beautiful history, i love the entire documentary, I LOVE CELINE and all the world are praying for her!
Jul 5, 2024
4
cmaclaur
I have SPS and I’ve been either paralyzed, trying to rest or completely weak the last couple days. The overstimulation from the noise & vibrations from the 4th of July celebrations nearly killed me, I swear!! So I’ve decided to attempt to watch, “I Am: Celine Dion,” as she is a fellow sufferer of Stiff-Persons Syndrome. I notice a few things immediately, I have to watch the show on mute with subtitles because the sounds (even her voice) in the documentary trigger my spasms and cramps immediately. I have to close or cover my eyes through some of it because of the flashing lights and quick movements. Most of us with SPS get the IVIG (plasma infusions) treatment that is shown in the beginning. We all take the different sedative & immunotherapy **** (IF we are lucky enough), tailored to our specific symptoms. These fog our brains, cause other issues, and none of us have the exact same experience with the illness or the treatments. The one thing that we do all experience is the progression of the illness and the loss of the effectiveness of the treatments. The autoimmune conditions start to add up, once you have one, you start getting more. Your body decides it’s going to kill itself. I see her dog. I bet she has someone there to feed it and let it out when she can’t move. It breaks my heart some mornings when I stare at my pup, and just have to tell her, just another half hour, girl, then I’ll hopefully be able to get you outside/feed you. I note her despair for the loss of being able to perform, to watch her dreams, passions and abilities slip away. I know this feeling well, as does everyone with SPS. It’s absolutely heartbreaking. Breathing does feel like you’re wearing a corset, except some of us have conditions where our involuntary muscles are affected as well. So our lungs don’t work as they should. Then breathing becomes terrifying, not just painful. I’m happy to see that she is able to walk to steadily; I’m constantly a ping pong ball bouncing off furniture, walls, horses and horse stalls. I’m guessing that she has days like that, too. We all suffer, I’m glad she was able to create this documentary to shine some light on the topic. I do believe though, without taking away from her pain, that there should be a documentary called, “We Are Not Celine Dion,” for the rest of us who fight with a whole other list of issues. The are thousands of us (this is a collective list of things I see in support groups) who don’t have money, a way to make money, have to fight with medical insurance companies, Medicaid, Medicare, Disability, live alone, have families that desert you, don’t have families to begin with, don’t receive adequate medical care, are ignored by doctors, don’t have the whole world rooting for them, don’t have the best doctors, specialists, physical therapists, rides to appointments, drivers to the grocery store or the pharmacy, medical professionals that come to your home, someone who cleans your house, poolside loungers to sit on, someone bringing “milkshakes” or food, “people waiting in line for your apples” that they pay a lot of money for… ?!?, sports medicine doctors to stretch your body, move you back into place, run to your side & hold your hand/rub your back/offer more meds when you have a paralytic seizure - the majority of us seize on the ground until our body lets up on its own, usually after about a half hour. She doesn’t know what it means to be, “All by Myself,” luckily, I don’t either, but some do. It’d be nice to cast a more realistic view of the struggles of SPS. Because most of us are not Celine Dion.
See All 14 User Reviews
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  • Sony Music
  • Sony Music Entertainment
  • Vermilion Films
  • Les Productions Feeling
  • Sony Music Vision
Jun 25, 2024
1 h 43 m
PG
Critics' Choice Documentary Awards
• 2 Nominations
Hollywood Music In Media Awards (HMMA)
• 1 Nomination
AARP Movies for Grownups Awards
• 1 Nomination
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