Showing posts with label Andy García. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Andy García. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 18, 2021

"Dedo, Modi, Modigliani", A Video for Entry of the 2021 Unified Filmmakers Festival (UFM 2021)





















How are you?

 

About two months ago, I received a request from “2021 Unified Filmmakers Festival (UFM 2021)” the film festival which is scheduled to be held in Berlin, Germany, for entry and produced a short video for the festival.

The topic of the film festival is COVID19, which is currently a fearful disease worldwide, and I produced a video relating COVID19 and tuberculosis, which caused Modigliani's death.

Tuberculosis, which had been tormenting Modigliani for his life, was a horrible disease that was highly contagious and incurable at that time, and people avoided the infected, but they were generous toward alcoholics and drug users.

Modigliani, who was very self-respecting, took an overdose of alcohol and drugs to conceal the fact that he was a tuberculosis patient, eventually deteriorated the disease, resulting in tragic death.


Amedeo Modigliani














Jeanne Hébuterne



















I linked COVID19 and tuberculosis because I think they are in similar situations although the times are different.

Although it was not selected for the online screening, I would like to have that meaning in the memorial of Modigliani once again and that it was my first work for the film festival.

This video is based on the contents of my Modigliani novel, "Dedo, Modi, Modigliani," which was an entry in the Amazon Book Contest.


Self-Portrait, Amedeo Modigliani (1919)

















Self-portrait, Jeanne Hébuterne (1916)
















Also what is meaningful in the production of this video is that I used the soundtrack of 2004 film “Modigliani” as background music by personal permission from Guy Farley, the music composer of the film, which was directed by Mick Davis and starred by Andy García as Amedeo Modigliani and Elsa Zylberstein as Jeanne Hébuterne.


Modigliani (2004)

















However, the video uploaded to social media is a version of the background music removed from the original video submitted to the film festival.


Grave of Modigliani and Hébuterne, Père
Lachaise Cemetery















Thank you


My Profile (Movie Site)

Dedo, Modi, Modigliani (Amazon)

YouTube

Blog (Korean)

Naver TV


Thank you.




Thursday, October 8, 2020

The Stories about Art Films: 24. Modigliani (2004), ACJ Movie Academy
































Basic Info

Title: Modigliani
Genre: Drama
Country: United States, France, Germany, Italy, Romania, United Kingdom
Language: English
Running time: 128 minutes
Release date: 29 September 2004 (France)

Staff

Director: Mick Davis
Produced by: Philippe Martinez, André Djaoui, Stéphanie Martinez
Screenplay: Mick Davis
Cinematography: Emmanuel Kadosh
Music: Guy Farley
Editor: Emma E. Hickox

Cast 














Andy García as Amedeo Modigliani
Elsa Zylberstein as Jeanne Hébuterne
Omid Djalili as Pablo Picasso
Hippolyte Girardot as Maurice Utrillo
Udo Kier as Max Jacob
Susie Amy as Beatrice Hastings
Peter Capaldi as Jean Cocteau
Louis Hilyer as Léopold Zborowski
Stevan Rimkus as Chaim Soutine
Dan Astileanu as Diego Rivera
George Ivascu as Moise Kisling
Theodor Danetti as Pierre-Auguste Renoir

Summary 
















“Modigliani” is a 2004 drama biographical film written and directed by Mick Davis. It is based on the life of the Italian artist Amedeo Modigliani. In the film, Andy García starred as Amedeo Modigliani and Elsa Zylberstein as Jeanne Hébuterne. Appearing at a number of film festivals in 2004 and 2005, the film made its world premiere at the Gala Selection of the Toronto International Film Festival.

Plot


Set in Paris in 1919, this biographical film highlights the rivalry between Amedeo Modigliani and Pablo Picasso, focusing on the artistic aspect. Modigliani, an Italian artist from Livorno, falls in love with Jeanne, a young and beautiful French woman. The two live together and give birth a baby, but Jeanne's father sends the baby to a distant convent. 














The annual art competition in Paris is coming soon, and the winner of the competition is guaranteed a prize money and a bright future as an artist. Modigliani had never participated in this competition because he thought it was too secular for true artists like him to attend. However, poor Modigliani, who needs money to raise his child, signs up for the competition while intoxicated with alcohol and drugs at a cafe frequented by artists, including Picasso. 

















Modigliani's painting of Jeanne
in a blue dress that he had stolen from a shop window wins the competition besting even the cubist portrait drawn by Picasso entitled “Modigliani." But Modigliani dies in hospital, and Jeanne commits suicide by falling from a window with her unborn child. 

Movie Review


“Those whom Gods love”
“A trip back in time to the magical world of the artist”
“An excellent movie”
“A true actor's movie”
“An amazing film, an amazing performance”
“Glad that's over and now can we see a movie about Modigliani”
“Beautiful work of theatrical art”
“Being a great artist means you have not to spoil it”


Interesting stories about the film


1. The scene when the furniture was piled up on the bed of Modigliani's mother is an incident that took place when Modigliani was born. It is a scene of property seizure following the bankruptcy for the business failure of Modigliani's father.

2. Modigliani met Jeanne in 1917, not 1919.

3. The rivalry between Modigliani and Picasso in the film has never been firmly proven.


4. “La vie en rose” by Edith Piaf, which is played when Modigliani and Jeanne dance in the streets, is a song written in 1945.

5. Modigliani met Renoir around 1918 without Picasso's help.

6. Modigliani died of meningitis and was not beaten up in the streets.

Thank you.

Movie Trailer
Amazon Author Page
Lecture Program List
YouTube
Korean Blog
Naver TV
Naver Post 


Now Available: “Paul Gauguin” Audiobook – The Great and Immortal Painters’ Stories, vol. 4

Hello!   I'm excited to share that the audiobook “The Great and Immortal Painters’ Stories: vol. 4 – Paul Gauguin” (Korean version)...