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DVD : Van GoghIn association with Amazon.comstarring: Jacques Dutronc, Alexandra London, Bernard Le Coq, Gérard Séty, Corinne Bourdon directed by: Maurice Pialat Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Audience Rating: R (Restricted) Binding: DVD EAN: 0043396173590 Format: Closed-captioned, Color, DVD-Video, Subtitled, Widescreen, NTSC Label: Sony Pictures Manufacturer: Sony Pictures Number Of Items: 1 Publisher: Sony Pictures Region Code: 99 Release Date: January 09, 2007 Running Time: 158 minutes Studio: Sony Pictures Theatrical Release Date: October 30, 1992 Sales Rank: 57507 MPN: D17359D Related Items:
Average Rating:
![]() Rating: - No Starry NightThis should not be viewed as a 'biography'. It is a ficticious movie that presents Vincent as a lady's man. It is made even worse as a 'life of the artist' because all the actors are very convincing and resemble their namesakes. A viewer who does not know more than the usual 'van Gogh was crazy and he cut off his ear' will unfortunately take this account as truth. But even they will be confused, as I was, because at this period in his life, Vincent's ear would have been disfigured. ... Read More Rating: - the bestAlong with Victor Erice's El Sol de Membrillo one of the few great films about a painter. Rating: - Realistic settings - imaginary storyThis is a competent rendering of the last weeks in the life of the fine arts painter Vincent Van Gogh in the rivertown Auvers-sur-Oise northwest of Paris. It's strength is its locations that are very authentic and the French personalities and settings that Van Gogh experienced and that would be lacking in any film not set in France and likely made by a Frenchman. There are plenty of innocuous conversations, luncheons and garden and nature walks. The most interesting relationship in the film is between ... Read More Rating: - Over-hypedThis film was over-rated and over-hyped. Jacques Dutronc is the most boring Van Gogh ever. Never once do you feel he ever painted a thing. And endless female prattle on top of this. You feel you are trapped on "The View." The great Robert Altman made the best and THE definitive film on the Van Gogh brothers. That film is highly worth viewing and purchasing. Rating: - Oh, God, I want the last three hours of my life back!I cannot vouch for the accuracy of this film, because it lost my full attention past the opening scene. After five minutes, my significant other was asleep. Always a bad sign, he'll watch anything. The movie is about the last two months of Van Gogh's life, and it feels like the viewer is watching each day pass by; each scene draws out innocuous, tedious details, e.g., a scene Van Gogh examined by his physician sucks up a good ten minutes of the time; physician chats with his cook, his son, yada, yada; ... Read More Browse for similar items by category:
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