New Van Gogh Biopic, "At Eternity's Gate" (2018) [View all]
Last edited Mon Dec 10, 2018, 11:17 PM - Edit history (1)
BBC. Willem Dafoe gives a magnificent performance as the troubled Van Gogh in Julian Schnabels gloriously artistic film. There may never have been a painter as sure of his artistic vision, yet as emotionally needy, psychologically troubled and socially isolated as Vincent van Gogh. Willem Dafoes magnificent performance captures every bit of the artists complexity in Julian Schnabels At Eternitys Gate. With stunning visuals and a judicious balance of poetry and drama, Schnabel draws us into both Van Goghs genius and his tortured life.
Film-makers have been fascinated by Van Gogh for decades, of course, from Lust for Life (1956) with Kirk Douglas as the scenery-chewing hero, to last years beautiful, animated Loving Vincent. Schnabel, esteemed as both a painter and the director of films including The Diving Bell and the Butterfly, takes an impressionistic approach, freely inventing scenes and swerving from history when it suits him.
The story he tells, of Van Goghs last years, is familiar nonetheless. Financially supported by his loving brother, Theo (Rupert Friend), Van Gogh lives and works in the village of Arles, joined for a time by Paul Gauguin (Oscar Isaac). In and out of asylums, he died at the age of 37 in Auvers-sur-Oise, a thorough failure commercially.
At the start of the film a voiceover by Dafoe expresses Van Goghs poignant loneliness. Over a black screen, he says of the villagers in Arles, I just want to be one of them. I would like to sit down with them and have a drink. The film then opens to reveal the sky and fields surrounding the village, a vista of rich colours, the blues and greens astonishingly like those in Van Goghs paintings.
Dafoe, with reddish hair and beard, piercing blue eyes and a craggy face, looks the part, but the brilliance of this performance comes from the way he quietly conveys the painters thoughts, insecurities and moments of inspiration. . .
More,
http://www.bbc.com/culture/story/20181116-film-review-at-eternitys-gate