Basquiat
Dir: Julian Schnabel
1996
*****
Julian Schnabel is an
underrated film director and his 1996 biopic Basquiat
is his most underrated film to date. Basquiat, the story of New Yorks most iconic artists, has a
cast to die for including Jeffrey Wright, David Bowie, Benicio del Toro, Gary
Oldman, Michael Wincott, Claire Forlani, Dennis Hopper, Tatum O'Neal, Courtney
Love, Christopher Walken, Willem Dafoe, Parker Posey, Sam Rockwell with Rockets
Redglare and Vincent Gallo playing themselves. Jean-Michel Basquiat is one of
my favorite artists of all time, I was obsessed with him during my time at art
school and still am, so I had high expectations for Schnabel's film. One of the films real strengths and one of the reasons why the
film works and feels authentic is because most of the cast knew Basquiat, Andy
Warhol, Rene Ricard and many more of the people involved in The Factory and art
in general in New York in the late 1970s early 80's. Jeffrey
Wright is brilliant in the title role, it's clear to see he did
his research and his performance is utterly convincing. David Bowie had the
obvious advantage of knowing Andy Warhol, Crispin Glover, Jared Harris and
Guy Pearce have all performed impressive impersonations of him but for my money
no one has come close to his portrayal, again, it's utterly
convincing. It's a great representation of what was happening in the art world
at the time, where it came from and what it meant. Basquiat was arguably
the most talented of all his peers and the film explains brilliantly how he was
absorbed into the factory way without loosing any of his own credibility,
indeed he used Pop art rather than Pop art using him. Schnabel was a painter
before he was a film maker, it is clear that he understands and is passionate
about Basquiat's story but it is also clear that he has somewhat
of a personal agenda but I don't think it is anything more than an artist
submerging himself in his own work. Again, the brilliant performances
make up for the very few biopic cliches, I enjoyed everything about it.
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