Van Gogh Movie Review
Van Gogh Review
"Van Gogh" Overview

Rating: R
1991
Cast and Crew
Director : Maurice PialatProducer : Maurice Pialat
Screenwiter : Maurice Pialat
Starring : Jacques Dutronc,Alexandra London,Bernard Le Coq,Gérard Séty,Corinne Bourdon,Elsa Zylberstein
Would you believe that Vincent Van Gogh, the character, has appeared in at
least 40 movies and TV shows? He's been played by everyone ranging from Kirk
Douglas to Andy Dick.
This time out it's French singer-composer-actor Jacques Dutronc's turn to play
the troubled master artist, recreating the final two months of Van Gogh's life,
a feat which earned him the Cesar Award.
Though lacking key features (like the shock of red hair and the chopped-up
ear), Dutronc oddly resembles Van Gogh in many ways. But more importantly, he
manages to embody the obvious manic depression from Van Gogh's later years, all
exuding from his scraggly face, sunken eyes, and bony frame. That's important,
because Van Gogh isn't about much more than the man's internal struggle. Other
characters come and go (from brother Theo (Bernard Le Coq) to his final love
affair with his physician's daughter (Alexandra London)), but in the end we're
left with Vincent and only Vincent, ultimately slowly dying from a
self-inflicted gunshot to the belly.
Plotwise, the film is thin, despite a run time of over 2 1/2 hours. Van Gogh
checks himself into a clinic of sort's (a doctor's house, actually) in the
French countryside, due to extreme headaches. This doesn't keep him from
painting and, more importantly, whoring it up with his favorite prostitutes. He
romances the doc's young daughter (who's smitten with him), oblivious to his
syphilis, and he spars with Theo, who's tasked with selling his paintings but
can't seem to move a one. They're stacked knee-high in the dining room of him
and wife Johanna (an understated and perfect Corinne Bourdon, who vanished from
the scene after making this film).
Still, spending the days drunk and sexed up at impromptu parties on the
riverbank don't seem so bad, and Van Gogh doesn't quite succeed at building a
case for Vincent's misery. His physical pain is barely noted and his anguish
over failing to sell his artwork doesn't get much play either. Director Maurice
Pialat puts the burden entirely on Dutronc, which he manages to carry quite
well.
But Pialat makes other mistakes, namely in his oddball editing and long treks
into events that have no bearing on the plot. First, the editing: Pialat has
the aggravating habit of chopping up a scene into pieces such that large chunks
are excised completely. A character might sit down to eat, then abruptly be
seen washing his plate, then abruptly climb into bed. But the background noise
and music track never stutter: It sounds like it's presented as a single moment
in time, but it looks like something quite different. This is a frustrating
problem throughout the film, and you never get used to it.
The bigger issue, though, is Pialat's lazy sense of urgency. We're dealing with
the end of a man's life, yet Pialat spends countless sequences watching
tertiary characters eat, take baths, lie around, and otherwise live the life of
someone on vacation. The film feels absurdly padded due to this conceit, and
even when it's Van Gogh who's doing the eating, bathing, and sleeping, it
hardly does anything to build his character.
Still, the searing Dutronc is the real reason to sit through the film. The film
can be quite frustrating at times, but it does provide a glimpse -- here and
there -- into what Van Gogh might have been like. Or maybe it's just Dutronc's
interpretation of the man. Either way, it succeeds.
The DVD includes deleted scenes (if you feel you need more of them).
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Review by Christopher Null
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