Van Gogh (1948) Poster

(1948)

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8/10
Documentary connecting Van Gogh's life and art
michael_chaplan16 February 2006
I saw this on a Japanese DVD with other early Resnais and Godard short films. (The title of the DVD in Japanese is Alain Resnais, Jean Luc Godard tampen kessaku sen. It is easily available in Japan.) The narration of the film was in French, with Japanese subtitles. As the narrator tells about Van Gogh's life, the camera shows Van Gogh's pictures (in black and white) of the house where Van Gogh lived at the time... the camera is constantly moving... you feel as if you are entering the house and moving from room to room as the camera cuts from one picture inside the house to another....an interesting way to describe the life work of an artist. The technique leaves the viewer wanting more.
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8/10
Affecting -- but puzzling
rob-28421 June 2005
The key events of Vincent Van Gogh's life are narrated (by Claude Dauphin in the French version, and by Martin Gabel in the English), and illustrated by the paintings, with appropriately heightened music score attached. That's it...and that's certainly enough, given the extraordinary interconnection of this particular artist's private life and his career. I have to say that it's extremely puzzling, not to say disturbing, that the entire film is in black-and-white, as if Van Gogh had made only charcoal sketches or woodcuts. Here's a short that cries out to be remade: Digital would make it easy to replace the B&W footage with color photography of the artworks, and both narration and score could remain as is. I was also dismayed that though the film has credits attached, Resnais's name does not appear on the English language print owned by UCLA and screened at the Motion Picture Academy last night. The audience seemed interested and moved, but surely they would have been more so if they'd known that this was an early work by the man who later employed many of the same techniques to memorable effect in "Last Year at Marienbad."
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7/10
VAN GOGH {Short} (Alain Resnais, 1948) ***
Bunuel197628 February 2014
Before acquiring a reputation as an elegantly formalist film-maker, Alain Resnais made a series of renowned documentaries some of which centered on the great painters or even individual works (such as Picasso's GUERNICA {1950}); this particular effort – obviously dealing with the tortured Dutch artist – went on to win both an Oscar and a prize at the Venice Film Festival. Van Gogh is perhaps the artist most picked on by the cinema, with at least four other notable films being made about him: the biopics LUST FOR LIFE (1956; the only one I have watched myself), VINCENT & THEO (1990) and VAN GOGH (1991), and the feature-length documentary VINCENT (1987)! This two-reeler, then, opts to tell his tragic life-story solely via narration (spoken by distinguished actor Claude Dauphin) accompanying stills – presumably in roughly chronological order – of the numerous canvases he signed illustrating the places, things and people around him and, of course, including his own famous self-portraits. Though occasionally repetitive and with their natural impact somewhat lessened by the absence of colour, Van Gogh's style is so well-defined (one might safely say that it has been over-exposed over the years) that his unique brushstrokes – no doubt an extension of the man's anguished personality – are instantly recognizable to even casual aficionados of the form!
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4/10
No real justice done
Horst_In_Translation29 July 2016
Warning: Spoilers
"Van Gogh" is a French(-language) short film from 1948, so it will soon have its 70th anniversary. It runs for 18 minutes approximately and was directed by Alain Resnais. Gaston Diehl and Robert Hessens came up with the idea and they won an Oscar for it. The title already tells you what the film is about: legendary Dutch painter Vincent van Gogh. We see paintings from him from start to finish while a narrator tells us a bit about his life. That's all there is to it. One major problem here is that if there is one painter who deserves a film in color because of how colorful his paintings and his life were, then it's Van Gogh. So it really hurts the topic overall that this is still a black-and-white film. In terms of the contents, especially the summary of his life, it was okay overall, but also could have been better. One of the weaker Oscar winners and I recommend the watch only to huge Van Gogh fans. This film will not turn you into one of these sadly.
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