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IMDbPro

Final Portrait. El arte de la amistad

Título original: Final Portrait
  • 2017
  • 12
  • 1h 30min
PUNTUACIÓN EN IMDb
6,3/10
6,3 mil
TU PUNTUACIÓN
Geoffrey Rush, Clémence Poésy, and Armie Hammer in Final Portrait. El arte de la amistad (2017)
The story of the touching and offbeat friendship between American writer and art-lover James Lord and Alberto Giacometti, as seen through Lord's eyes and revealing unique insight into the beauty, frustration, profundity and sometimes the chaos of the artistic process.
Reproducir trailer2:07
9 vídeos
38 imágenes
Dark ComedyDocudramaPsychological DramaBiographyComedyDrama

La historia del pintor y escultor suizo Alberto Giacometti.La historia del pintor y escultor suizo Alberto Giacometti.La historia del pintor y escultor suizo Alberto Giacometti.

  • Dirección
    • Stanley Tucci
  • Guión
    • Stanley Tucci
    • James Lord
  • Reparto principal
    • Geoffrey Rush
    • Armie Hammer
    • Tony Shalhoub
  • Ver la información de la producción en IMDbPro
  • PUNTUACIÓN EN IMDb
    6,3/10
    6,3 mil
    TU PUNTUACIÓN
    • Dirección
      • Stanley Tucci
    • Guión
      • Stanley Tucci
      • James Lord
    • Reparto principal
      • Geoffrey Rush
      • Armie Hammer
      • Tony Shalhoub
    • 45Reseñas de usuarios
    • 120Reseñas de críticos
    • 70Metapuntuación
  • Ver la información de la producción en IMDbPro
    • Premios
      • 1 nominación en total

    Vídeos9

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 2:07
    Official Trailer
    Trailer #1
    Trailer 1:57
    Trailer #1
    Trailer #1
    Trailer 1:57
    Trailer #1
    why are we here
    Clip 1:51
    why are we here
    The Spy Who Came In
    Clip 1:41
    The Spy Who Came In
    You'll Get Used To It
    Clip 0:57
    You'll Get Used To It
    Final Portrait: Why Are We Here?
    Clip 1:51
    Final Portrait: Why Are We Here?

    Imágenes37

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    Reparto principal23

    Editar
    Geoffrey Rush
    Geoffrey Rush
    • Alberto Giacometti
    Armie Hammer
    Armie Hammer
    • James Lord
    Tony Shalhoub
    Tony Shalhoub
    • Diego Giacometti
    Sylvie Testud
    Sylvie Testud
    • Annette Giacometti
    Clémence Poésy
    Clémence Poésy
    • Caroline
    James Faulkner
    James Faulkner
    • Pierre Matisse
    Kerry Shale
    Kerry Shale
    • Claude Martineau
    Annabel Mullion
    Annabel Mullion
    • Anne-Marie Frenaud
    Tim Dreisden
    • Café Waiter
    Takatsuna Mukai
    • Annette's Lover
    Philippe Spall
    Philippe Spall
    • Pimp
    Gaspard Caens
    • Pimp
    Laura Bernardeschi
    • Café Customer
    • (sin acreditar)
    Maja Bloom
    Maja Bloom
    • French Girl in the Dream
    • (sin acreditar)
    Marina Capasso
    Marina Capasso
    • Italian Friend of Giacometti
    • (sin acreditar)
    Laetitia Cazaux
    • French Prostitute
    • (sin acreditar)
    Begoña Fernández Martín
    • Graveyard Woman
    • (sin acreditar)
    Dolly Jagdeo
    • Party Girl
    • (sin acreditar)
    • Dirección
      • Stanley Tucci
    • Guión
      • Stanley Tucci
      • James Lord
    • Todo el reparto y equipo
    • Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro

    Reseñas de usuarios45

    6,36.2K
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    Reseñas destacadas

    8danielmeench

    For the sophisticated spectator

    The search for perfection is an endless workflow. It is a routine in which there is always time for a walk with a friend, an affair with a muse or a fight with a wife.

    The peculiarity of this picture is that Tucci does not dramatize the reality of life. He shows everything as it happens in it. A good well-done shot story about the true love of artists for their craft.
    7StoryArchitect

    Stanley Tucci paints a beautiful "Portrait of an Artist as an Old Man" / Silver Knight Rating: 7.5 Cameras

    My Silver Knight Riff

    1. I think a lot of people, especially artists, will enjoy this movie, even though it's kind of slow.

    Kind of like watching paint dry.

    Ouch. Sorry. Does that sound unfair? Too harsh? Well, maybe, but don't get me wrong. I really like the movie.

    I like slow. I like watching paint dry.

    I'm a painter.

    And so this movie speaks to me. I admire it. I admire Alberto Giacometti, whose life and mind I didn't know a whole lot about. I admire the screenwriter and set designer and all other facets of this refined 1h 31m movie--a terrific example of the Jean-Luc Godard concept that a movie is "the world in an hour and a half."

    In all kinds of satisfying ways, FINAL PORTRAIT paints a compelling portrait of Art.

    2. But I'm just being honest with you. Because when I went to see FINAL PORTRAIT the other night at the 1938 Art Moderne architectural gem the Tower Theater here in Sacramento, California, that thought, "like watching paint dry," flashed through my mind 1/2 way through the movie.

    A movie about a painter and painting and paint.

    So in a way, you can't help yourself having this thought, right? But it interrupted my concentration. I was sitting there in the theater as focused on the screen as Giacometti on his canvas. The film hooked me. But my mind wandered. Which broke the spell.

    Why?

    Because as this moment signified, when you get right down to it, the story design of FINAL PORTRAIT lacks the multi-dimensional development and depth that produces a sustained and irresistible emotional response.

    3. I wanted more from FINAL PORTRAIT than intellectual appreciation. I wanted to feel and experience what I'm always hoping a movie will deliver--what all types of art will deliver, but especially a movie: what Robert McKee calls "aesthetic emotion" . . . and what the ancient Greeks called catharsis. Related concepts, but not the same.

    And when I watch a movie, I can't help yielding to the upwelling of these two magical forces any more than Jude Law's leaky-faucet character, Graham, can avoid tearing up in THE HOLIDAY.

    But FINAL PORTRAIT didn't trigger in me these emotions. I went into the theater hoping to come out like Jude Law's Graham. But I exited the theater like Cameron Diaz's Amanda. Dry eyed.

    4. FINAL PORTRAIT didn't affect me the way I expect a great story exceptionally well told to affect me. But FINAL PORTRAIT is a treat for our eyes, ears, and soul. And it is most definitely a good story well told.

    And the movie takes me back 25 years ago to memories of seeing 32 SHORT FILMS ABOUT GLENN GOULD. (24 Short Films About Glenn Gould for my mom, because she entered the theater late and missed 1/4 of the film.) Makes me want to see both movies again. The pianist and the painter.

    And for 25 years, I've been breathing in Glenn Gould's artistic spirit and intellectual temperament, and to at least some degree they've infiltrated my being. I already feel the same thing happening because of FINAL PORTRAIT's rendering of Alberto Giacometti.

    I'll take what I saw and learned from the filmmakers' portrayal of him and their portrayal of art back to my studio to paint and repaint a new portrait of myself.

    For years to come.

    5. A few quick notes about the actors. Armie Hammer, in the role of James Lord, the American writer who narrates the movie and the model for Giacometti's final portrait, strikes an appealing pose in his reserved way as he did even more so in one of last year's most exquisite films, CALL ME BY YOUR NAME, for which James Ivory (at 89) so deservingly won the Academy Award for Best Adapted Screenplay.

    And Geoffrey Rush . . . well, such a wonderful actor . . . what an engaging and compelling portrait of Alberto . . . his spirit . . . heart . . . mind . . . . His face molded by the filmmakers into a likeness of one of Giacometti's sculptures . . . his physicality makeupped and dressed to reflect the gray of his paintings. What a gift for Rush to play such a role. And he gives us the gift of his art in return.

    Tony Shalhoub portrays Alberto's faithful gatekeeper-brother Diego so well too. Understated and nuanced. And Annette (Sylvie Testud) and Caroline (Clemence Poesy) also well written, cast, and rendered too. Pretty much not a wrong note by the artists of the cast and the artists who comprise the filmmaking team.

    6. We get lines that educate and entertain about Giacometti himself, his artistic process and exacting patient search, and other artists about whom Giacometti has fascinating things to say, succinctly honoring Cézanne, nothing surprising revealed there, but slamming Picasso, way surprising.

    And even James weighs in about Dora Maar and Cézanne's wife in witty lines of exposition and observation.

    I also liked the brief scene of Alberto doing coffee with actor James Faulkner's Matisse--a surrealist twist given that Matisse died in 1954, 10 years before the time of the movie.

    So Giacometti liked Cézanne and Matisse, but not Picasso? That's OK with me--Cézanne and Matisse are the two kings on the chessboard of modern painting. Picasso himself knew that. But disappointing to learn that Giacometti undervalues the importance of Picasso and Braque and Analytical and Synthetic Cubism. Especially when Giacometti's sculptures and paintings reflect their influence.

    7. I guess the deepest most lasting impression for me--if I were to fast forward 25 years to what I might then look back and recall--will likely prove to be the pleasing feature that struck me right off the bat: the muted, gray color palette of a movie about the artist called the "Grey One." The filmmakers paint the look and feel of Giacometti's World in tones of gray, warm and cool. A World, an Arena, that includes his Studio . . . and his Home . . . and the Courtyard that connects them--the Space between that unifies the turbulent angst of Giacometti's somber intense melancholy gray world of Work and Love.

    Freud said those are the two basic human needs. The two that most people need fulfilled to feel happy.

    Work and Love.

    FINAL PORTRAIT gets that.

    8. We see the twilight struggle of Alberto's Inner World at the end of his life given poetic expression through the gray portrait of the artist's Outer World.

    A world of light and shadow and hazy windows and mirrors and broken glass . . . quasi reflections of emotional truth and complex gray human relationships . . . reinforced through the subtext of Giacometti's compressed and mid-toned work-and-love venue where the unfolding of the drama of his life takes place.

    I believe that architecture is the stage set for the drama of life--the drama of life and death. The world in a building.

    The filmmakers of FINAL PORTRAIT are in touch with these concepts.

    9. The set design of Giacometti's studio features sculptures ranging in size from XL to XS. We see variants of Giacometti's trademark sculptures: stick-like, elongated, vertically distorted--an echo of El Greco.

    But we also see more classically volumetric studies, including an XL sculpted head that Giacometti especially adores. A self-portrait? Probably. Like all of his work.

    And this particular sculpture of an XL face helps us grasp Giacometti's brave eccentricity and obsession with the plasticity and rugged terrain of the human head. Sculpted and molded by the artist's hands as if by God from the clay of the earth--but sculpted true to Cézanne's view of the world as formed essentially by geometric primaries: cubes, cones, cylinders, and spheres.

    We get the feeling that all of these sculptures are Giacometti's best friends. Expressions of his zest, life force, and love.

    And through the art of film, we view Giacometti in a studio where sculptures of people interact visually and symbolically with flesh-and-blood human beings, all in a crowded sacred space that runs on the psychological energy and physical work of the artist and on the fuel of the tense interplay of the artist's and his models' minds and emotions--from buoyant Caroline, Alberto's prostitute girlfriend, so eager for him to paint her portrait . . . to low key James who's honored to sit for the artist but can't wait to leave Paris and get back to New York . . . to agonized Annette, the wife, distraught but steadfast and accepting.

    10. FINAL PORTRAIT presents the layered emotional choreography of this odd ensemble of souls, united by Alberto Giacometti's fiery passion, on a stage set of life where the artist isn't the typical starving artist. Just the opposite. Giacometti is so successful selling his art that he has money to burn.

    But he doesn't care. Because he knows that money can't buy him the one thing he really wants--what all artists worth their soul really want:

    Truth.

    11. I didn't know anything about this movie before it started. Zero. Only the title. Just the way I like it. So I had no idea it was about Giacometti. Or who was cast in the roles of a screenplay I didn't know who wrote. So the credits at the end revealed the beautiful surprise. Wow. Way to go Stanley Tucci. Director and Writer. Thanks to James Lord and your sensitive adaption of his memoir "A Giacometti Portrait," you've painted the canvas of the silver screen with beautiful brush strokes, evoking in me associations with James Joyce through your Portrait of an Artist as an Old Man.

    My Silver Knight Rating of FINAL PORTRAIT:

    White Knight (Form): 8.0

    Black Knight (Story): 7.0

    =

    Silver Knight (Form & Story): 7.5

    7.5 Cameras

    The Silver Knight Rating scores a movie's level of play in what I call the Chess Game of Art. (See my IMDb commentary on ARRIVAL.)
    6CineMuseFilms

    If you enjoy watching paint dry this is your film

    If you enjoy watching paint dry this is your film. Imagine an artist who is unable to finish a painting without needing to start again…and again. That is the basic premise of Final Portrait (2017). It's a bio-pic that looks into the idiosyncratic mind of renown Swiss artist Alberto Giacometti (Geoffrey Rush) in a story so lacking in forward narrative that many will be left wondering why they watched it at all.

    Based on real events, Final Portrait is an adaptation of a memoir by American writer James Lord (Armie Hammer) who is flattered when asked to pose for a portrait by Giacometti. Believing it may be a single session, it turns out to take almost three weeks of daily sittings. The artist lives amidst chaotic mess with a long-suffering wife who tolerates his obsession with a prostitute girlfriend. He hates banks; prefers to hide cash under his studio rubble; has few social filters; and is liked by all despite a tendency insult others. The portrait sessions are constantly interrupted by long walks, drinks at nearby bars, and frequent outbursts due to chronic perfectionism that ensures his works are never finished. He is unable to walk past his clay sculptures without making a change and some are so altered that they are reduced to stick figures. Lord's amused and bewildered fascination with the life of a creative genius keeps him cancelling his return flight to America just to see his final portrait.

    The nineteen-day timeframe feels like the same event repeated nineteen times (mercifully, with some time compressions). Along the way, we watch the deeply etched face of the cantankerous Giacometti as he grimaces in self-rebuke, lusts after his girlfriend, and gazes deeply into the gaze of James Lord to search not for the look but the inner soul of another human being. If you can forgive Geoffrey Rush's Aussie-Swiss accent, there is much to admire in his characterisation of an angst-ridden artist. But it is also wearingly repetitive. Lord is the master's foil as the suited slick- back straight guy. Initially adrift in the world of an erratic painter, he is conservative and upright yet his vanity is drawn like a moth to the flame of genius, eager to understand Giacometti's creativity. While both play their part brilliantly, it is Geoffrey Rush who dominates the screen. The studio set is cluttered and claustrophobic, like the artist's mind, and the cinematography employs the shallow depth-of-field effect to dwell on detail, allowing sharply focused faces to peer between blurred works of art as if to say these are but points in time that will never find their final form.

    There are clever ironies in watching a painter who studies his subject, while the subject studies the painter. It's a three-way mirror between audience, Rush and Lord. But such existential twists are not enough to elevate this film to a level of great meaning. Viewers enthralled by this field of art might enjoy the story but most others may struggle. It's like a moment in time that lasts nineteen weeks, then compressed into ninety minutes. There is little to look forward to as the ending has no more meaning than the beginning but is far more welcomed.
    10vladimir-janic

    Not for everyone

    Loved the film, it is definitely not for everyone, as an art student it was rather interesting to see an artists process of making a painting. The film itself is rather small, it is centred around one particular event. The acting is great. I would recommend it to artists and people who are interested in creative process of making an artwork.
    7alvesmarceloalves-73751

    An interesting portrait

    An interesting portrait about the painter Giacometti at the end of his life, when he painted his last painting before he died. It is curious to see their crises, their insecurities and dissatisfactions in the act of creating. And Geoffrey Rush is very well in the role of the painter while creating an interesting relationship with the character of Armie Hammer.

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    • Curiosidades
      London doubled for Paris in the film because they couldn't afford to film in Paris. Filming took place over a week and a half and CGI was used to make it look like Paris. According to Tucci, it was cheaper for a small film to use CGI than to visit the real location.
    • Citas

      [first lines]

      James Lord: [narrating] In 1964, I was a young writer living in Paris. I had written a few articles about Alberto Giacometti, who was one of the most accomplished and respected artists of his generation. I had become good friends with Giacometti and his brother, Diego. And one day, after an exhibition, he asked me to sit for a portrait. He told me it would take no longer than two to three hours. An afternoon at the most.

    • Conexiones
      Featured in Conan: Armie Hammer/Nick Swardson (2018)
    • Banda sonora
      Jazz à Gogo
      Music by Alain Goraguer

      Lyrics by Robert Gall

      Published by Editions Bagatelle / EMI Music Publishing Ltd

      Performed by France Gall

      Courtesy of Polydor Records (France)

      Under licence from Universal Music Operations Ltd

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    Preguntas frecuentes18

    • How long is Final Portrait?Con tecnología de Alexa

    Detalles

    Editar
    • Fecha de lanzamiento
      • 29 de diciembre de 2017 (España)
    • Países de origen
      • Reino Unido
      • Estados Unidos
    • Sitios oficiales
      • Official site
      • Official site (Germany)
    • Idiomas
      • Inglés
      • Francés
      • Italiano
    • Títulos en diferentes países
      • Final Portrait
    • Localizaciones del rodaje
      • Ruby's Bar & Lounge, 76 Stoke Newington Road, Londres, Inglaterra, Reino Unido(old truck and french restaurant scene)
    • Empresas productoras
      • Potboiler Productions
      • Riverstone Pictures
      • Olive Productions
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    • Recaudación en Estados Unidos y Canadá
      • 461.972 US$
    • Fin de semana de estreno en EE. UU. y Canadá
      • 25.472 US$
      • 25 mar 2018
    • Recaudación en todo el mundo
      • 1.677.835 US$
    Ver información detallada de taquilla en IMDbPro

    Especificaciones técnicas

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    • Duración
      1 hora 30 minutos
    • Color
      • Color
    • Mezcla de sonido
      • Dolby Digital
    • Relación de aspecto
      • 2.35 : 1

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