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Surviving Picasso is a 1996 Merchant Ivory film starring Anthony Hopkins as the famous painter Pablo Picasso. It was directed by James Ivory and produced by Ismail Merchant and David L. Wolper. Ruth Prawer Jhabvala's screenplay was loosely based on the biography Picasso: Creator and Destroyer by Arianna Stassinopoulos Huffington.
The film starts with a young woman named Françoise meeting Picasso in Paris during the Nazi occupation of the city, where Picasso is complaining that people broke into his house and stole his linen, rather than his paintings. It shows Françoise being beaten by her father after telling him she wants to be a painter, rather than a lawyer. Picasso is shown as often not caring about other people's feelings, firing his driver after a long period of service, and as a womanizer, saying that he can sleep with whomever he wants.
The film is seen through the eyes of his lover Françoise Gilot (Natascha McElhone). As the producers were unable to get permission, to show the works of Picasso in the film, the film is more about Picasso's personal life rather than his works, and where it does show paintings, they are not of his more famous works. When Picasso is shown painting Guernica, the camera sits high above the painting, with the work only slightly visible.
The film depicts several of the women who were important in Picasso's life, such as Olga Khokhlova (played by Jane Lapotaire), Dora Maar (played by Julianne Moore), Marie-Thérèse Walter (played by Susannah Harker), and Jacqueline Roque (played by Diane Venora).
It was shot in Paris and southern France.
The film received mixed to negative reviews, with a 33% rating on Rotten Tomatoes, based on 18 reviews.[1]
London, United Kingdom, France, Amsterdam, Berlin
Cubism, Spanish Civil War, Igor Stravinsky, Henri Matisse, Museu Picasso
Academy Awards, Berkeley, California, Merchant Ivory Productions, Emma Thompson, India
Laurence Olivier, Jack Nicholson, Daniel Day-Lewis, Marlon Brando, Al Pacino
Autobiography, Plutarch, Psychology, Christianity, Charles Dickens
E. M. Forster, Henry James, India, Aparna Sen, Emma Thompson
New York City, BAFTA Award for Best Adapted Screenplay, Merchant Ivory Productions, Coen brothers, Howards End (film)
James Ivory (director), Merchant Ivory Productions, Michael Almereyda, Ira Sachs, Sundance Film Festival
Australia, London, Poland, University of Sydney, Warsaw