Surviving Picasso Movie Review
Surviving Picasso Review

"Surviving Picasso" Overview

Rating: R
1996
Cast and Crew
Director : James IvoryProducer : Ismail Merchant,David L. Wolper
Screenwiter : Ruth Prawer Jhabvala
Starring : Anthony Hopkins,Natascha McElhone,Julianne Moore,Joss Ackland,Peter Eyre,Jeanne Lapotaire
If you learn only one thing while watching Surviving Picasso, it will probably
be this: Pablo Picasso was a big fat jerk.
Unfortunately, that's about all you'll learn, as Merchant-Ivory's latest
exercise in excess sheds little light on the great artiste and leaves the
viewer with even less of an understanding as to why Picasso was the man he was.
Anthony Hopkins is the obvious choice for Picasso, and the film takes the track
of vaguely following Picasso's life along with his many, many love interests,
including the psychotic Dora Maar (Julianne Moore in a fantastic performance),
his wife Olga (Jeanne Lapotaire), a couple of other relationships, plus the
mysterious Francoise Gilot (Natascha McElhone), who suffered with Pablo for
some ten years. (All of the women perform their roles admirably.)
What the film doesn't do is show you any insight into Picasso's life, except
for the fact that he was stingy, paranoid, stubborn, and basically a lech. The
movie's liberal use of voice-over and thick accents doesn't help matters, and
this already cryptic tale becomes even more inaccessible -- not only is it hard
to understand what this movie is really about, it's hard to understand what
anyone is saying.
As played by Hopkins, Picasso is transformed into a childish goon with no
redeeming qualities, and given Surviving Picasso's 123 minute running time,
this gets extremely tiresome, extremely quickly. For the last 1 1/2 hours, I
was really just waiting for the credits. So I guess we'll never really
understand what Picasso was all about.
The sad result is that, in the end, Surviving Picasso is really just one long
exercise in survival itself.
One happy family!
Reviewer: Christopher Null





