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Edvard Munch

Play trailer Poster for Edvard Munch Released Nov 12, 1974 3h 35m Biography Drama Play Trailer Watchlist
Watchlist Tomatometer Popcornmeter
100% Tomatometer 12 Reviews 89% Popcornmeter 1,000+ Ratings
This intimate docudrama reveals the life of Norwegian artist Edvard Munch (Geir Westby), the Expressionist best known for his iconic painting "The Scream." Munch's childhood is overshadowed by death:he suffers the loss of his sister and mother, while enduring serious illness himself, almost dying. At university, Munch discovers his talent as a painter. As he immerses himself in the art world, he becomes part of a cultural revolution lead by the likes of nihilist Hans Jæger (Kare Stormark).

Critics Reviews

View All (12) Critics Reviews
Eric Henderson Slant Magazine Edvard Munch, in Watkin's subjective documentary setting, is one of the penultimate cultural crusaders, a relic of a dying era in which individualism could, apparently, still conceivably be intuitive and not reactionary. Rated: 3.5/4 Feb 24, 2006 Full Review John Monaghan Detroit Free Press There have been countless film biographies of famous artists, but only a few can be considered major works in their own right. Place Edvard Munch at the top of the list. Rated: 3/4 Nov 11, 2005 Full Review Michael Wilmington Chicago Tribune Brings us close to both the creator and his creations. Rated: 3.5/4 Jan 20, 2005 Full Review Dustin Chang Floating World Peter Watkins's Edvard Munch plays out like how Kurt Vonnegut laying out time. The tumultuous time in late 19th century Europe is displayed in the background, giving the film much needed context behind Munch's often disturbing art. Jan 8, 2022 Full Review Cole Smithey ColeSmithey.com Rated: 4/5 Feb 21, 2008 Full Review Kam Williams Upstage Magazine Takes a fairly encyclopedic approach to present an unparalleled probe into the mind of an art icon. Rated: 3.5/4 May 31, 2007 Full Review Read all reviews

Audience Reviews

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Audience Member This film is a colossal achievement. It's the best film I have ever seen on the artistic process, and a pioneering film in the "faux documentary" genre. I confess I liked it marginally less on this second viewing, but I would chalk that up to it being just a little too soon for me to invest another 3 hours in a film I had recently seen. Rated 4 out of 5 stars 02/01/23 Full Review Audience Member There have been countless film biographies of famous artists, but only a few can be considered major works in their own right. Place Edvard Munch at the top of the list. Rated 4 out of 5 stars 01/25/23 Full Review Audience Member Another Peter Watkins success. I found this film really evoked the events, emotions, tragedies, times and religious influences that affected Edvard Munch's life and thus his work. He was a great painter but so great the critics and the establishment abhorred his work and thus him. One of his "The Scream" is up for auction at Sotheby's and is estimated to fetch $80 million dollars. Quite an accomplishment for a piece made by an artist that the critics said was insane and that his work was disgusting, unfinished, perverse etc etc Peter Watkins uses a quasi-documentary style to tell the story of Edvard Munch's life and blends in scenes through time back and forth along with music and editing that helps you feel how Edvard felt and what he was going through. At the same time we see him creating his paintings and see the finished products. I highly recommend this film. Ingmar Bergmann said it was a work of genius. Rated 4 out of 5 stars 01/12/23 Full Review Audience Member This is the only film I wished hadn't already ended after just over 2 hours and 45 minutes. Rated 5 out of 5 stars 02/27/23 Full Review Audience Member Edvard Munch's life is portrayed as a multi-layered piece of art, with a dark, deep and disturbing beauty. The film lasts for 3Â 1/2 hours so isn't for the easily bored, but was (in my opinion) well worth watching. Rated 4.5 out of 5 stars 02/23/23 Full Review Audience Member Took me two days to watch this even though it wasn't painful to get through or anything. It' hasn't to be one of the most fascinating and inspiring movies about art I've ever seen. It's easy to just jump in and describe the formalistic decisions Watkins made, and the achievement of actually pulling it off. But it'd feel more appropriate if I tried to articulate the emotional reaction it got out of me. The moods it evoked. The tone of thoughts it stirred inside me upon witnessing the psychological anguish and subsequent creativity it inspired in Munch. There's a strange universality to the dreamlike web of Munch's life story. Like Sombre, he's haunted by this impossible desire to possess the women he loves. "The desire to possess her is a wound." It causes a paranoia. An icy fear that fuels his nightmarish and increasingly abstract works of art. The public, predictably, rejects the manifestations of these feelings. Labeling them as works of the unstable, the consensus dismisses them, horrified. These aren't my feelings. This is the emotional backdrop of his story. But if they convey feeling, perhaps that is what I meant to do. Because I, too, have often felt this angry artistic inspiration. This terrible desire to see deeply into the darkness and truth of oneself, and express it in hopes of redeeming these feelings. In hopes of supplying oneself with meaning. I've always known this can never happen. But what else can one do with these feelings? No, they must be expressed. Munch turned these obsessive and frightening feelings into master works of paint and wood carvings. But he never got over these feelings. This emotional state was his identity. It's also what made him this rare type of individual. He always felt opposed to the world. Unable to make complete sense of it. He felt opposed to women, because he perhaps thought they sought to weaken him. He felt opposed to other men because of jealousy, which he described as, not the fear of loss, but the fear of division. He sought to escape from the isolation of the world through emotional and physical love, and he never did. It's incredible how close I feel to his character, despite his existing an entire century before my time. It has a lot to do with this breathtaking, original narrative style Watkins serves us, which plays like Nicolas Roeg meets Terrence Malick. Memories appear unexplained, interwoven with the present tense. And there's a lingering voice of narrative/historical wisdom, as if in a documentary, giving us this overarching encyclopediac sense of time. And characters talk to us, right to us, about their political/artistic beliefs, completely convincing us that somehow this film was created in the 1880/90s. And we're right there, as close as you can get, when the moment of inspiration hits Munch. As he scrapes away all of the unimportant details of his canvas. As he tends to the obscurities of his deep, dark abyss. The most unforgettable formalistic technique by Watkins is to have his characters look directly into the camera in the middile of scenes, or during important moments of crisis, as if in one of Munch's own paintings. We get this strong sensation of connection with them. They confide in us, despite their intimacies. Despite their melancholia in their present moments, they look to US. Impossible. Such is the magic of this movie. Rated 5 out of 5 stars 01/19/23 Full Review Read all reviews
Edvard Munch

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Movie Info

Synopsis This intimate docudrama reveals the life of Norwegian artist Edvard Munch (Geir Westby), the Expressionist best known for his iconic painting "The Scream." Munch's childhood is overshadowed by death:he suffers the loss of his sister and mother, while enduring serious illness himself, almost dying. At university, Munch discovers his talent as a painter. As he immerses himself in the art world, he becomes part of a cultural revolution lead by the likes of nihilist Hans Jæger (Kare Stormark).
Director
Peter Watkins
Screenwriter
Peter Watkins
Distributor
New Yorker Films
Production Co
Sveriges Radio, Norsk Rikskringkasting, Norsk Film
Genre
Biography, Drama
Original Language
Norwegian
Release Date (Theaters)
Nov 12, 1974, Original
Release Date (Streaming)
Oct 8, 2016
Box Office (Gross USA)
$43.5K
Runtime
3h 35m
Sound Mix
Mono
Aspect Ratio
16mm