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10 out of 12 people found the following review useful:
Bewitching portrait of a phantom artist, 14 October 2008
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Author:
oOgiandujaOo from United Kingdom
I was a bit suspicious of this film as it is a biopic (if need must
that it conform to a genre pigeonhole). For me biopics pander to the
cult of celebrity, no such thirst needs slaking. However once in a
while one comes along that is not merely pablum. Such a film is Giorgi
Shengelaya's Pirosmani.
It's a film about Nikolai Pirosmani, who was a naive artist, that is
the word, I believe, used for people like Henri Rousseau, who is the
famous example, who haven't been trained formally to paint but come up
with their own highly expressive style often luminous and ethereal.
Pirosmani's paintings can be found online by a simple search and are
good background for watching the film. His work reminds me of el Greco,
in it's luminosity and generally weight of significance. One of the
shots in the film was quite educational, Pirosmani was painting on a
canvas that was painted black beforehand. I've heard of painters
painting on a canvas they've painted white beforehand, to give light.
Perhaps this Pirosmani technique helps the luminous colours he uses
stand out more. Anyway it was interesting and showed minute attention
to detail from the filmmakers.
The film is quite interesting because for quite a lot of his life he
was unknown and even sold groceries and worked on trains before
painting for a living. In the town he lived in from time to time,
Tiflis, he had painted pictures for all of the bars in the town. I
think one of the saddest moments of the film was when they showed him
walking around town as an old man and all the tavern owners had sold
his paintings because they had become worth money, and so the taverns
were no longer pretty, and the town felt soulless.
There is some interesting camera-work here, the film is shot in a
formalist manner mostly, so lots of static, rectilinear shots, and
formal composition, but also it is very magic real, which goes well
together. The style also serves to heighten the effect when any moving
shots are used.
I think this Pirosmani as portrayed in this film was a very lonely guy,
he never settled down and had a family and he tended to move around a
lot, so it was a sad film. But his paintings in it were very beautiful,
and the film is very educational, as even with a strong interest in
painting I had never heard of Niko Pirosmanashvili before. There are
some experimental things going on, we have Pirosmani turn into a child
at one point when he is retracing the footsteps of his youth, and also
some very surreal moments when he is talking to old friends of his.
Clearly enough artistic content to satisfy those weary of conventional
genre tropes.
His stint as a shopkeeper is the most interesting part for me, he ends
up not being able to hack it, he gets swindled, and the needy are
always asking him for charity, which he seems unable to refuse. In the
last scene of his time running a shop, he asks the prince's chef for 5
roubles, when the usual price of the groceries request is 80 kopecks,
ie. he wants 6 times the normal price. The prince can obviously afford
this, but the chef isn't going to take this treatment on principle and
marches out. Then when a group of beggars (mostly children) wander in
after the chef, quite surreally he ends up loading them down with the
entire shop's produce for free, in one scene he pours a bowl of honey
straight into a child's hand (this for me is a heartbreaking scene,
full of tenderness and humanity). At this point he closes the shop down
as shopkeeping is clearly not for him.
The central problem of his existence appeared to be his humanity, too
sensitive and honest to mesh into the gears of societal norms he led a
phantom-like existence tavern-hopping. Two artists in the film seem to
be perpetually looking for him throughout the whole storyline as is
they were ghost hunters. Whenever we see Niko at a social gathering he
is like a restless spirit tied down to the earth, perplexed. His end
seems almost intuitive from the start of the film, he dies alone in a
hovel of a room underneath a staircase.
The entire film is not dour, there seems much of the Georgian spirit
and occasional humour in it, at a wedding feast some men singing a
mesmerising dirge (or if not a dirge, something entirely sombre) are
interrupted by a matriarch striking up something altogether more
gleeful on her accordion.
It it perhaps the most beautiful magic real film I have ever seen. One
of my favourite scenes to remember is perhaps the scene where he sits
down in a theatre and watches the actress Margarita twirl and dance
singing a French song. He is not one of the living so he does not
applaud, he does not hurry to the stage door or make entreaties at the
dressing room door. He disappears and paints a wonderful picture of
her. For anyone who has ever felt this sort of "otherness", Pirosmani
is a must see.
Long live Georgian cinema!
6 out of 7 people found the following review useful:
Georgia's national Artist, 15 September 2006
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Author:
allenrogerj from United Kingdom
A beautiful film: it depicts Pirosmani's life from early manhood in a
series of scenes. Pirosmani- a famous primitive artist and Georgian
hero- himself is played by Avtandil Varazi, an expert on the artist who
acted as art adviser as well. He plays Pirosmani as becoming concerned
almost entirely with his work, abandoning family and friends, moving
away from humanity, uninterested in others- there are scenes where he
is shown in inns, sitting alone, eating and drinking in exchange for a
painting, uninterested in the people around him, turning down
opportunities to be with them. The scenes which perhaps show his
relationship with the public are one where he is locked in a room and
told "You don't come out 'til we've got a painting.". The camera moves
to outdoor celebrations- a strange set of scenes, including
traditionally-dressed Georgians dancing a traditional dance to "modern"
music on a horn gramophone, regardless of the music's relevance. "Oops"
someone says "We've forgotten Piosmani." and we see him inside the door
of the room, the painting, a view of Tiflis, completed. The other shows
him taken up by the upper classes: one young painter is almost silent,
just stares at the paintings and later brings him money for paint, but
there is a scene of local dignitaries making speeches to which
Pirosmani's response is just to ask for a wooden building where people
can show pictures and talk. Later, when he is the victim of a
caricature in the paper, he cannot understand the reason for it.
Is there a Georgian school or style of film-making? Like Paradjanov,
the greatest Georgian director, but not quite so strongly, there are
deliberate, formal, pageant-like scenes and little concern for
set-realism- Pirosmani's shop is shown in an empty landscape, rather
than the city, for example, and the inns he works in are consciously
shown as parts of a set. Scenes are deliberately staged theatrically,
with the camera a fixed, distanced spectator. Perhaps the way Pirosmani
painted is reflected in turn in the way the film is made. The cast-
amateurs mostly- do not act the characters so much as "be" them in a
Bresson-like way. A fine and unusual film about a fine artist in short.
Update, March 2010: Watching all of Paradjanov's films- including a
short about Pirosmani made many years after this film- I'm inclined to
think that the resemblances may derive from Pirosmani's influence on
Paradjanov.
4 out of 4 people found the following review useful:
Strange biopic is well worth watching, 7 October 2007
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Author:
Andres Salama from Buenos Aires, Argentina
This little known film is quite strange yet well worth watching. Made in 1969, it tells the story of one Nico Pirosmanishvilli or Pirosmani, a primitive Georgian painter, not very well known in the west, who lived at the turn of the last century. The movie shows his paintings (I must admit I was not terribly impressed by them), his proud poverty, his antisocial behavior. A lot of the movie is shot in sparse, mildly surreal tableaux. When he sets up a shop with his brother, for example, it is not located in the city, but in the middle of a plain. There are some fine shots of the old, dilapidated quarters of Tbilissi, where Pirosmani lived since middle age, barely making ends meet by painting in taverns. I don't know if there is a Caucasian school of film-making, but this film suggests a saner, decaffeinated Paradjanov (who, as a matter of fact, did film a short about Pirosmani).
5 out of 6 people found the following review useful:
Wonderful Film, Sadly Unavailable, 30 December 2006
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Author:
DialoGuy from United States
I saw this movie when it played at the New Directors New Films series at the Museum of Modern Art in 1975. It was a wonderfully straightforward consideration of a very simple artist who, rather in the manner of Toulouse-Lautrec, hung out in bars and painted, literally, for his living, for food and drink. The film, I remember, had a style which diminished perspective rather as the artist did himself; I completely admired it, and frequently reflect on the sorry state of things that so fine a work can be just unavailable! I grew up in a world where memory of films was often the best one could hope for -- that world had the advantage of "revival theaters" where some old films might be viewed on a full-sized movie screen -- but now things are quite different and many many movies are available for owning or rental, but here is a clear example of a wonderful film -- sadly one of thousands -- still unavailable.
5 out of 6 people found the following review useful:
A lonely determined artist struggles to get recognition for hiswork..., 17 August 2000
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Author:
Peegee-3 (poetsrx@webtv.net) from Santa Monica, CA
This touching and lovely little film is like a series of tableaux...A lonely artist in Georgia (Russia) paints rather naif works, but charming, has a difficult time getting them displayed, but he stays with it determined to get some recognition. It's a very unique flick,based on the life of an actual Russian artist... that moved me deeply with this depiction of a man dedicated to his art, believing in it despite all the rejections and lack of support by the world. A classic commentary on the sad fate of a huge majority of artists (even talented ones), some of whom get "discovered" after they die.
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