Película homenaje a Van Gogh, la trama trascurre un año despues de su "suicidio" y en donde su ultima carta debe ser entregada, cada fotograma es un cuadro pintado sobre óleo, tal y como el propio Vincent lo hubiera pintado. Sus 80 minutos de duración están compuestos por 56.800 fotogramas que han sido pintados, uno a uno, por una gran cantidad de excelentes pintores a lo largo de varios años, todos inspirándose en el estilo y arte magistral de Van Gogh.
Película compuesta de ocho cortometrajes. Son ensoñaciones dispersas, independientes, pero engarzadas entre sí por deseos, angustias y añoranzas. La historia de Yo, desde su infancia hasta su vejez, sirve para mostrar las relaciones del hombre con el mundo, el arte, la espiritualidad, la muerte. Los ocho relatos (extraídos de sueños de Kurosawa) reflejan lo cambios experimentados por Japón a lo largo de un siglo.
Basada en la vida de Vincent Van Gogh y protagonizada por Willem Dafoe, narra el tiempo en el que el famoso pintor se mudó a Francia. En concreto a Arles y Auvers-sur-Oise, donde vivió un tiempo conociendo a miembros de la vanguardia, incluyendo a Paul Gauguin. Tiempo en el que se esforzó en crear obras maestras, que hoy en día, son reconocidas en todo el mundo.
The tragic story of Vincent van Gogh broadened by focusing as well on his brother Theodore, who helped support Vincent. Based on the letters written between the two.
Biopic del famoso pintor impresionista Vincent Van Gogh, que retrata su atormentada vida a partir de su obra, que no es más que un reflejo de la ansiedad, la sensación de fracaso y la soledad que lo llevaron, finalmente, a la locura.
Cuando el reservado y solitario adolescente Fenix (Chase Hudson) conoce a la popular chica de instituto Scarlett (Sydney Sweeney), los dos crean un vínculo que marca el resto de su vida. Un drama musical con la música de Machine Gun Kelly.
After leaving the asylum, Vincent van Gogh settles in the home of Doctor Gachet, where he keeps painting amidst the torments of his failing mental health. He begins an affair with his host’s daughter, however, she soon realizes that he doesn’t love her and that his heart beats only for art.
A drama-documentary presented by Alan Yentob, with Benedict Cumberbatch in the lead role. Every word spoken by the actors in this film is sourced from the letters that Van Gogh sent to his younger brother Theo, and of those around him. What emerges is a complex portrait of a sophisticated, civilised and yet tormented man.
A young woman who has just started a job at an art museum writes an email to a friend she lived with until recently. The other woman, also young, works as an artist and has just moved to a new city. A narrator reads this email, but we don't know which of the two women the voice belongs to, whether to the sender or to the receiver of the message. Neither are we aware of the details of this relationship; but what we do know is that, in addition to their interest in art, they share a concern for the difficulties of carrying out their personal and professional lives in the present. By focusing on the peripheral or hidden details of some paintings in the Bilbao Fine Arts Museum, this narrator relates several stories linked to the social, economic and psychological conditions of the artists, both past and present.
Vincent Van Gogh's life was a masterpiece painted with the dueling colors of madness versus genius. However, this inner battle gave birth to some of the greatest works of art known to man. The film traces Van Gogh's journey through the many twists and turns of his tumultuous and exciting life.
"I envy the Japanese" Van Gogh wrote to his brother Theo. In the exhibition on which this film is based - VAN GOGH & JAPAN at the Van Gogh Museum in Amsterdam - one can see why. Though Vincent van Gogh never visited Japan it is the country that had the most profound influence on him and his art. One cannot understand Van Gogh without understanding how Japanese art arrived in Paris in the middle of the 19th century and the profound impact it had on artists like Monet, Degas and, above all, Van Gogh. The film travels not only to France and the Netherlands but also to Japan to further explore the remarkable heritage that so affected Van Gogh and made him the artist we know of today.
A one-man filmed play of Leonard Nimoy's adaptation of "Van Gogh" (1979) by Phillip Stephens.