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Lust for Life (1956)
In director Vincente Minnelli's CinemaScopic biopic
of the famous nineteenth-century Dutch artist Vincent Van Gogh:
- the scene in which impulsive and obsessive artist
Vincent Van Gogh (Oscar-nominated Kirk Douglas) agonized over unrequited
love and forced himself upon widowed cousin Kay (Jeanette Sterke)
- as a result, she was never to talk to him again - and later Van
Gogh's persistence to see her (at her parents' home) caused him
even more pain and "disappointment in love"
- the various scenes of his life translated to his
painted canvas (such as Vincent's Bedroom at Arles)
- the vicious argument scenes and stormy relationship
between the tortured painter and his brawling fellow housemate/painter-mentor
Paul Gauguin (Oscar-winning Anthony Quinn) in Arles (Southern France)
about their different art styles: (Gauguin:
"...you paint too fast" -- Van Gogh: "You look too fast");
also Gauguin made a spiteful criticism of Van Gogh for his easy life: "I
didn't have a brother to support me"
- the dramatic scene of Van Gogh's discussion with his
loyal and financially-supportive Dutch art dealer/brother Theo (James
Donald) about his failed life: ("We've grown apart, Theo. Look,
you found what you wanted in Paris and I'm glad for you. I've found
nothing - anywhere. I've made one bad start after another. One mess
after another. I thought I was on my way here by doing God's work.
That was the worst failure of all. But no matter how often I fail,
there is something in me. That I am good for something")
- when Theo accused him of wasting his time and becoming
an idler, Van Gogh replied that there were two kinds of idlers: ("An
idler? Yes. But there are two kinds of idlers. There's the man who's
idle because he wants to be, out of laziness. How easy that is. I
envy him. There's the other kind, the man who's idle in spite of
himself. I want nothing but to work. Only, I can't. I'm in
a cage, a cage of shame and self-doubt and failure. Somebody believe
me. I'm caged. I'm caged. I'm alone. I'm frightened")
- the resultant shocking self-mutilation scene of the
suffering artist battling his own mirror reflection and his pained
head, and then cutting off part of his own left ear (off-screen)
with a straight-edged razor, out of extreme loneliness and despair
- the sequence of Van Gogh's increasing madness when
painting in a rural area and black crows attacked (and he added them
to his painting), and then shortly later, he steadied a piece of
paper in the fork of a tree and wrote himself a note about his severe
depression: "I am desperate. I can foresee absolutely nothing.
I see no way out" - then, he attempted suicide by shooting himself
with a gun he had removed from his pocket (off-screen)
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Attacked by Crows
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"I am Desperate"
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- the final scene of Van Gogh's death with his brother
Theo at his bedside, when he asked: ("Theo? I'd like to go
home") - and then slumped over dead, with his pipe falling
from his hand; Theo cried out: ("My own brother. My poor,
poor brother")
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Vincent Van Gogh Forcing Himself on Cousin Kay
Life Translated to the Canvas
Paul Gauguin (Anthony Quinn): "You paint too fast"
- Van Gogh: "You look too fast"
Gauguin: "I didn't have a brother to support
me"
Theo (James Donald)
Discussion About Two Kinds of Idleness With
Brother Theo
Self-Mutilation Scene
Van Gogh's Death
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