Your Account   Help   |   Your Basket: Empty   Checkout

 

Coming Soon      Bestsellers      Recommended      Special Offers      MovieMail Latest

MovieMailMovieMail HomeRed Desert
Home > World Cinema > France > Van Gogh

Recommended Van Gogh

Maurice Pialat, 1991

Star Review

Given the mythology that surrounds Van Gogh (or ‘Van Gog’ as he’s known here), Pialat’s decision to set the film in the last two months of his life, when he stayed at Auvers-sur-Oise, 20 km from Paris, is a bold one. Van Gogh is removed from one of his great sources of nourishment – the southern sun of Arles, and dramatic events such as his relationship with Gauguin, his fits and his stay at the St. Rémy asylum are behind him. Also, to all intents and purposes, Van Gogh appeared healthy in his last days, all of which allows Pialat to concentrate on the man. By turns timid, restless, irascible, amused and resigned, Jacques Dutronc’s portrayal is convincing.

Although he painted 70 canvases in the two months in Auvers, the film pays as scant attention to these as the villagers did at the time, to whom he was an eccentric who painted, and whose canvases were piled up on the floor in a dingy corner of an inn, where they were for the most part ignored. But if we see little of his paintings, Pialat performs a clever trick of making the surroundings look as if they are ready to be the subject of a canvas – as distinct from making them stiflingly picturesque. For a while too it’s as if the southern sun has travelled northwards, gilding the village.

Pialat has thoroughly researched the details of his subject – Dr. Gachet’s peacock, the praise of the critic Aurier, even the look of the people that we are familiar with through paintings or photographs – Gachet, Toulouse-Lautrec, Vincent and Theo, Theo’s wife Johanna. Sometimes the details he presents are subtle: the only canvas Van Gogh sold in his lifetime – ‘The Red Vineyard’ – makes an appearance, but only in the lines of a song sung at Vincent’s request in a brothel.

Director Maurice Pialat was himself a painter of renown. This is his compassionate tribute from a painter to a man.

Graeme Hobbs on 6th September 2005

View all 228 of Graeme Hobbs’s reviews

[ Show Film Description ]

Reviews

Share your thoughts - write a review

Film Stills - click to view in full

Image 3 Image 4

View all 4 film stills in full size

Related Genres

£11.99

RRP: £22.99
Save £11.00 (47%)
Free Delivery on UK Orders!

Availability
. Delivery times

Ratings for this DVD

Average Rating

5/5

Log in to place your vote!

DVD Extras
  • 2 discs
  • Deleted scenes with introduction by editor Yann Dedet
  • Jacques Dutronc interview
  • Gallery of Maurice Pialat's paintings
  • Pialat & Dutronc biographies
  • Theatrical trailer.
Film Details

Director

Maurice Pialat

Year

1991

Country

Europe, France

Cast

Jacques Dutronc, Elsa Zylberstein

Technical Details

Certificate

15

Length

152 mins

Label

ART-E

Format

DVD Colour

Region

2

Aspect

Enhanced for widescreen TV

Cat No

ART040DVD

Main Language

FRENCH

Subtitles

English

Customers who liked this also liked...

1959, Jean-Luc Godard, DVD

 

£5.99

RRP: £19.99
Save £14.00

Recommended Breathless (Godard, 1959)

'Après tout, je suis con.' So states petty thief Michel at the start of Godard's film in which a dash of flai...

More Details

 

MovieMail Latest

 

 

 

Monthly Film Catalogue

December Film Catalogue The Digital Edition of our December Film Catalogue is out now!

 

 

Films by Maurice Pialat

 

Films starring Jacques Dutronc

 

Films starring Elsa Zylberstein

 

 

 

 

 RSS Feeds | MovieMail Podcasts | December Film Catalogue | Subscribe to our email newsletter!

Browse our Film catalogue: DVDs by Genre | DVDs by Country | DVDs by Director | DVDs by Actor

New Releases | Bestsellers | Recommended | Special Offers | MovieMail Latest

 

 

MovieMail use a Thawte certificate to ensure secure transmission of your information. Click here for for information HACKER SAFE certified sites prevent over 99.9% of hacker crime.

 

 

For questions or assistance, call us on (+44) 0844 776 0900 or email enquiries@moviemail-online.co.uk

© 1996-2008 MovieMail Ltd., All Rights Reserved. Find out more about MovieMail