Lust for Life is appropriately titled, for mere passion seems inadequate
when describing this superb fictionalized biography (based on Irving Stone's
popular novel) of Vincent Van Gogh. In a deservedly OscarR- nominated
performance,
Kirk Douglas is physically and emotionally perfect as the
tormented Dutch painter, whose life is chronicled from his ill-fated stint
as a preacher to Belgian miners in 1878, to his Impressionist-inspired
artistic awakening and psychological descent to suicide in 1890. Having
triumphed with 1952's The Bad and the Beautiful, Douglas, producer John
Houseman, and director Vincente Minnelli brought vigor and vitality to this
blessed project, which centers on Van Gogh's stormy friendship with fellow
artist Gaugin (Oscar-winner Anthony Quinn). Minnelli used an outmoded color
film process and innovative camera techniques to vividly recreate Van Gogh's
paintings, and he filmed on the actual Dutch and French locations where Van
Gogh's mastery flourished. The artist's lust for life also fed his madness,
and this film deeply understands the fine line in between.