Explore
 Lists  Reviews  Images  Update feed
Categories
MoviesTV ShowsMusicBooksGamesDVDs/Blu-RayPeopleArt & DesignPlacesWeb TV & PodcastsToys & CollectiblesComic Book SeriesBeautyAnimals   View more categories »
Listal logo

A good movie

Posted : 4 years, 2 months ago on 18 February 2020 11:22

To be honest, I’m not really sure if we really needed yet another movie about this tormented artist but since I always had a weak spot for Julian Schnabel’s work, I was really eager to check it out. Well, after Jean-Michel Basquiat, Reinaldo Arenas and Jean-Dominique Bauby, Schnabel, himself a famous painter, focused once again on another artist, the big difference was that, this time, it was easily one of the most famous artists that ever lived. And, that was probably the biggest obstacle that this movie had to face. Indeed, what can you say about the guy that hasn’t been said so many times before? In my opinion, by focusing mostly on his mental state which was a pretty neat approach, Schnabel did partially succeed but not completely though. Basically, according to the makers, Van Gogh was constantly overwhelmed by the beauty in our world but this process was so intense that he became some kind of Icarus who got too close and basically completely burned his soul. As a result, it was also really difficult for him to connect with other people, in fact, there were probably just a handful of people with whom he really managed to develop a lasting and meaningful relationship. So, eventually, even though the guy was probably one of the greatest geniuses that ever lived, he led a terribly tormented and lonely life but, even though I liked the impressionist approach chosen by Julian Schnabel, it was nothing really groundbreaking. At least, I really liked the fact that they did show the painting process which is something actually really rare in this kind of biopics and this process was quite fascinating to behold. Anyway, to conclude, even though I don’t think it turned out to be the ultimate biopic about this great painter, it was still pretty good though and it is definitely worth a look, especially if you like the genre. 



0 comments, Reply to this entry

At Eternity’s Gate

Posted : 5 years, 2 months ago on 8 March 2019 01:34

God, Willem Dafoe really is one of our most undervalued actors. Ignore for a second that he’s about twenty-five years older than Vincent van Gogh when he died and look at his performance here. He’s been this good for so long that it’s easy to forget just how captivating he is in close-up, how great he is in portraying full-bodied agony. If only the rest of At Eternity’s Gate had functioned at his level.

 

It’s not that At Eternity’s Gate is bad, it’s just that Julian Schnabel’s tendencies as a filmmaking veer towards incoherent visual continuity and a disregard for narrative sense. As van Gogh descends into madness, so too does the camera-work, except Schnabel begins his portrait of the artist at madness and only goes weirder from there. There’s also a distinct lack of purpose in reconciling with the artist as a man or with his work at play here. It’s as if Schnabel merely wanted to film pictorial landscapes and have Dafoe read actual letters from van Gogh describing his wonder at nature’s beauty.

 

It’s all a bit lazy and ugly with no character’s lasting long enough to get any definition aside from what the talented ensemble brings to them. The entire film is an enigma and a scattershot of ideas, symbols, and faces that hardly register as much of anything after a while. What was the intent of Schnabel’s insouciant camera choices: Are we trying to digest the artist’s near-zealotry to create in the face of omnipresent opposition and criticism? Are we trying to reconcile with art, understanding how it’s critiqued and glimpsed through its time and social prism? Are we aiming for something deeper, richer to be said about van Gogh?

 

The answer to all of these is yes and no simultaneously as At Eternity’s Gate takes all of them, some more vigorously than others, until it’s carrying too much water for its anemic shoulders to bear. It also becomes something of a gauntlet as scene after scene descends into van Gogh encountering towering, occasionally violent opposition to his technique and belief in his talent. Given that he died in obscurity and was only elevated as a master of the medium through his own invigorating technique, this is not entirely without a core of truth to it. This doesn’t mean it’s enjoyable to watch after the third or fourth scene, especially one with school children pelting him with rocks.

 

 This leads us back to Dafoe’s performance, the film’s lifeblood and divinity. It would be too easy to play van Gogh in a showy manner, he was mentally ill after all, but Dafoe forsakes such choices. His eyes simmer with a fully realized inner world, one that the rest of the film elides in favor of painting him as a simple victim of a cruel world. Yet it’s exactly that penetrating gaze that enlivens several tedious scenes, including a few with a wasted Oscar Isaac as Paul Gauguin. Where Schnabel is blanching away from asking the “why,” Dafoe is valiantly trying to exhume some pathos and sensitivity, to grapple with the madness and creativity of the great artist he’s playing. He makes At Eternity’s Gate worth watching.



0 comments, Reply to this entry

At Eternity's Gate review

Posted : 5 years, 3 months ago on 27 January 2019 03:29

Van Gogh's creative almost saint Madness revisited, in dense dialogues and close ups. Dafoe is convincing and has strong pieces of dialogues with everybody, includin dear dear bro Theo.


0 comments, Reply to this entry