A team of 125 classically trained oil painters from 20 countries created 65,000 individual frames on canvas.
The project took nearly seven years to complete. To maintain accuracy, the directors updated the film with the latest scholarly research, such as repainting 3,000 frames to reflect that Van Gogh likely cut off his entire ear rather than just a part of it.
The filmmakers used rotoscoping , where live-action footage of actors (including Douglas Booth and Saoirse Ronan) was filmed first and then hand-painted over by the artists to mimic Van Gogh's signature style.
This report covers the 2017 biographical drama , renowned as the world’s first fully oil-painted feature film. Production Overview
Set one year after Vincent van Gogh's death, the story follows , the son of a postmaster, who is tasked with delivering Vincent's final letter to his brother, Theo. Discovering that Theo has also passed away, Armand travels to Auvers-sur-Oise to investigate the mysterious circumstances surrounding Vincent's "suicide". The narrative unfolds as a "Rashomon-style" mystery , featuring conflicting accounts from people who knew the artist in his final days. Critical Reception
A team of 125 classically trained oil painters from 20 countries created 65,000 individual frames on canvas.
The project took nearly seven years to complete. To maintain accuracy, the directors updated the film with the latest scholarly research, such as repainting 3,000 frames to reflect that Van Gogh likely cut off his entire ear rather than just a part of it. Loving_Vincent_HD_2017_Bluray_1080p
The filmmakers used rotoscoping , where live-action footage of actors (including Douglas Booth and Saoirse Ronan) was filmed first and then hand-painted over by the artists to mimic Van Gogh's signature style. A team of 125 classically trained oil painters
This report covers the 2017 biographical drama , renowned as the world’s first fully oil-painted feature film. Production Overview The filmmakers used rotoscoping , where live-action footage
Set one year after Vincent van Gogh's death, the story follows , the son of a postmaster, who is tasked with delivering Vincent's final letter to his brother, Theo. Discovering that Theo has also passed away, Armand travels to Auvers-sur-Oise to investigate the mysterious circumstances surrounding Vincent's "suicide". The narrative unfolds as a "Rashomon-style" mystery , featuring conflicting accounts from people who knew the artist in his final days. Critical Reception