Brad Pitt called Bradley Cooper’s Maestro “one of the best movies of this decade” during a conversation published by IndieWire on 2 July, adding that the Leonard Bernstein portrait “stays with me in every frame.” The endorsement revives praise Pitt first voiced onstage at the 2024 Santa Barbara International Film Festival, where he presented Cooper with the Outstanding Performer award and described the film as a “masterwork.”
Cooper’s second feature as director premiered at the New York Film Festival in October 2023 and reached Netflix two months later after a limited theatrical run that generated an estimated $300,000, the streamer’s strongest specialty debut in four years. It went on to secure seven Academy Award nominations—including picture, actor, actress and screenplay—though prizes ultimately eluded the production. Critics broadly commended Cooper’s physical performance and Carey Mulligan’s turn as Felicia Montealegre, with The Guardian praising the “head-flingingly heartfelt” energy of the character study.
Accolades arrived alongside debate over the makeup design that gave Cooper a larger nose; detractors alleged ethnic stereotyping, while the Anti-Defamation League and Bernstein’s children publicly defended the creative choice. Makeup artist Kazu Hiro later missed an Oscar when voters favored Poor Things, but his work on Maestro remains cited in craft-guild shortlists.
Industry observers note that Pitt’s latest comments land as Cooper weighs future directing prospects and as Netflix weighs whether to expand its theatrical strategy after the film’s long-tail performance on the service. The renewed spotlight also comes amid continuing critical reassessment; The New Yorker applauded the technical virtuosity yet faulted omissions in Bernstein’s private life, underscoring the film’s ability to fuel conversation nearly two years after release.