- Year: 2021
- Released: 28 Sep 2021
- Country: United States
- IMDb: https://www.imdb.com/title/tt15469820/
- Rotten Tomatoes: https://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/britney_vs_spears
- Metacritics: https://www.metacritic.com/movie/britney-vs-spears
- Available in: 720p, 1080p,
- Language: English
- MPA Rating: TV-MA
- Genre: Documentary, Biography, Music
- Runtime: 93 min
- Writer: Sloane Klevin
- Director: Erin Lee Carr
- Cast: Britney Spears, Erin Lee Carr, Jenny Eliscu
- Keywords: investigation, pop star, abuse, legal battle,
6.4/10 | |
41/100 | |
60% – Critics | |
55% – Audience |
Britney vs Spears Storyline
Journalist Jenny Eliscu and filmmaker Erin Lee Carr investigate Britney Spears’ fight for freedom by way of exclusive interviews and confidential evidence.
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Britney vs Spears Movie Reviews
Getting the Deep Dive on the Free Britney Movement
I was dying to learn more about the Free Britney movement….joke….was just curious enough to have it on while multi-tasking. This documentary dramatically reveals the back story, why the conservatorship was established, the trauma it was for Britney and how she was able to free herself. Hope that wasn’t a spoiler. LOL. This doc was nicely done with decent creative effort. It has light visual interest for the personal interviews, mixed in some visual graphics to accentuate points along with live footage with or without voiceovers from the interviewees. It obviously took Britney’s side but did a good job of humanizing a huge pop star, showing her flaws and her life obstacles. And now I hear she just inked a multi-million dollar book deal. Someone else will have to see how much deeper she gets in the book than this film.
Revealing documentary that lifts some truth on what went on
STAR RATING: ***** Saturday Night **** Friday Night *** Friday Morning ** Sunday Night * Monday Morning
Britney Spears was the biggest pop phenomenon on the scene in the late 90’s and early 00’s, topping the charts with a series of hit singles and constantly in the public spotlight. But a few years later, she suffered a very public breakdown, and fell under the control of a Conservatorship, controlled by her father Jamie. Director Erin Lee Carr and journalist Jenny Eliscu delve behind the inner workings of the legal arrangement, exposing what Jamie and the lawyers have to gain.
It’s always a sad thing to watch someone go from being famous for their talent and what they do, to being famous for their lives away from that, and whatever daily dramas spring up in their increasingly chaotic lives. This was certainly the case with Britney Spears in the middle to late 00’s, when she found herself placed under a Conservatorship for the first time, which has remained in place since then, despite being competent enough to go on three world tours, release several new albums and still make a lot of people behind the thing very rich.
Eliscu and Lee Carr are reassuringly in the pro Britney camp (with, unsurprisingly, hardly anyone in the pro Jamie camp) and are at pains to expose how much Britney doesn’t fit the traditional criteria to be put under such an arrangement, and possibly never has done, while still being expected to operate as a performing monkey, working as a cash cow for those around her. The paparazzi have also followed suit, following this apparently mentally unstable person around, swarming around her everywhere like a pack of bees, which can’t have helped. She emerges as ‘too famous,’, and was certainly exposed to too much fame/becoming too much of a cultural icon at such a young age, when she was still developing.
This is ultimately a very tragic tale, of how fame and money can corrupt people, even at the detriment of another person, by those who are meant to care for them and have their best interests at heart. Eliscu and Lee Carr have done a good, thorough job at shining a light on those who are trying to control Britney for their own ends. ****
Hearing Britney’s Voice
This new documentary “Britney vs. Spears” focused more about Britney’s tight legal trap of a conservatorship. It was basically a conversation between the director Erin Lee Carr and Rolling Stones journalist Jenny Eliscu as they looked through and commented on various documents that came out about the case. It featured interviews with Spears’ rumored ex-boyfriends paparazzi Adnan Ghalid and former manager Sam Lutfi, as well as her former personal assistant Felicia Culotta (who was very clear who she did not want to talk about).
“Britney vs. Spears” is a considerably more sober affair than the more colorful “Framing”. Aside from the “toxic” Jamie Spears, shade was cast against former manager Larry Rudolf, her business manager Louise Taylor and another ex-boyfriend Jason Trawick. Meanwhile, the controversial role of Lutfi was essentially diminished. Carr saved the best for last, as we hear Britney’s own impassioned speech appealing for her freedom in court last June 2021. The final cards update the progress of the case up to September 7, 2021.