Whether you are an art lover or not, whether you are a mystery lover or not, whether you are even a cinema lover or not, you MUST see this 1.5 hour film for its sheer production technique!
Calling this an animation film would be an insult to the 125 artists who hand-painted 65,000 frames over 2 years (with a prior 4 years of preparation) to produce the fantastic Van Gogh painting effects in every frame of this movie. Actors were filmed on green screen, digitised and painted over in every frame together with the background to produce the painted animations. Even when there is no movement in the shot, the succesion of painted frames produces a mesmerising shimmering effect that is at once extremely ethereal as well as totally Van Gogh-ish.
Since I have some interest in art, I could recognise some of his famous paintings that has been used as backgrounds on the one hand, and as characters on the other. But it was only when I read about the making of this film that I realised to what extent the film-makers have weaved in Van Gogh's painting of scenes and portraits into the frames of the movie. That had its own challenges for the artists - adapting a vertical canvas to a horizontal frame, painting characters from different angles when only one portrait was available, changing the colour tone of the painting if it was a different season in the film - all were seamlessly handled. Not to speak of a totally different black-and-white style used for Van Gogh's pre-artist days when no reference material was avilable. In short, viewing 'Loving Vincent' is a pleasure and a visual wonder.
The visual magic does not detract from the attraction of the story-telling. The movie takes off at a point where Van Gogh has died from a supposed suicide and his last letter addressed to his brother Theo lies in the hand of Vincent's old friend the postman. The postman delegates to his son Armand Roulin (the main protagonist played by actor Douglas Booth) the job of locating Theo or Vincent's closest relative, since Theo is not locatable. Armand's search takes him to Paris and then to the small village of Auvers where Van Gogh spent his last days. The story develops into a mystery regarding his death and Armand almost gets to the bottom of it. Through the story, we also discover an artist who was always doubtful of his own capabilities, humble, high-strung, yet hugely talented and prolific (he painted 800 paintings in 8 years, of which only one got sold in his lifetime).
The skill of the narrative also lay in carrying the story through painting after painting that flow through the changing scenes, and portraits that appear as characters in the movie. At no point does this juxtaposition seem forced and Dorota Kobiel as writer and director needs to take a bow. In fact, Dorota Kobiel, who trained as a painter, made good use of her background and love for Van Gogh in this iconic debut production that ended up as an Oscar nominee.
If you are a lover of paintings, see this movie.
If you are interested in Van Gogh's life story, see this movie.
If you want to see a visual treat, see this movie.
If you want to wonder how 125 painters painted 65,000 frames to produce 900 shots that run for 1.5 hours, definitely see this movie.
Here's the link to the trailer to get you interested.