It is obvious that Celly Campello (and so does Tony Campello) deserved a documentary, and information and footage in this film are good enough to prove that. However, there is a quite weird narrative, stated by many interviews in the movie (particularly the one given by Celly's husband), that she made a free and authonomous choice to quite so fastly her career in its very climax. Just paying attention on what she and her husband say in their testimonies make it quite obvious that her decision derived from emotional blackmail and manipulation. That is, there was no real free choice! She had a successful career which could easily, in that moment, enter a softner pace and still release discs while not abandoning domestic life. However, in what I consider a very selfish behaviour, her fiancé stated that they could not stay together if she kept her musical career. It is ofensive how, despite all those explicit elements, filmmakers decided to sustain that obvious (and sexist) misinterpretation of facts.