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Rembrandt's J'Accuse...! (2008)

Rembrandt's J'Accuse...! (2008)

GENRESDocumentary,Mystery
LANGEnglish
ACTOR
Martin FreemanEva BirthistleJodhi MayEmily Holmes
DIRECTOR
Peter Greenaway

SYNOPSICS

Rembrandt's J'Accuse...! (2008) is a English movie. Peter Greenaway has directed this movie. Martin Freeman,Eva Birthistle,Jodhi May,Emily Holmes are the starring of this movie. It was released in 2008. Rembrandt's J'Accuse...! (2008) is considered one of the best Documentary,Mystery movie in India and around the world.

An 'essayistic' documentary in which Greenaway's fierce criticism of today's visual illiteracy is argued by means of a forensic search of Rembrandt's Nightwatch. Greenaway explains the background, the context, the conspiracy, the murder and the motives of all its thirty-four painted characters who have conspired to kill for their combined self-advantage. Greenaway leads us through Rembrandt's paintings into seventeenth-century Amsterdam. He paints a world that is democratic in principle, but is almost entirely ruled by twelve families. The notion exists of these regents as charitable and compassionate entities. However, reality was different.

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Rembrandt's J'Accuse...! (2008) Reviews

  • Peter Greenaway makes the case for murder and teaches us all how to read a painting in the process.

    dbborroughs2009-10-02

    Peter Greenaway's companion piece to his Nightwatching about the painting of Rembrandt's Night Watch. This is Greenaway himself, using clips from the film and new footage of the cast of that film, to tell the story of the painting and the mystery it contains. I have no idea how true the murder plot is, but Greenaway makes a damn good case for it. He argues that Rembrandt arranged the people in the painting to reveal the plot the militia leaders had contrived to kill one of their own. He also used it to expose the hypocrisy of the members as well. He takes us through 34 of some 50 plus points in detail telling us what he thinks it all means. As I said earlier I have no idea if what he says is true, but I'll go with it as a possibility. What also shines in this film is how Greenaway makes you rethink how you look at a painting. We are not used to seeing paintings as the artists and patrons of Rembrandt's day were so we don't see the references that were put there. We also get bits and pieces of history that bring the painting and the time it was painted alive. Its so informative I really wish that someone would turn him loose and let him do a series of film on art and art history. This is an amazing film.If you're like me you'll want to watch not only this film but also Nightwatching again. After several misfire films Greenaway seems to once more have hit his stride with his two Rembrandt films.

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  • Always interesting

    neil-4762010-09-21

    Peter Greenaway's brain must be a strange place - gifted with an amazing visual sensibility and an ability to convey that to an audience, but cursed with odd mental processes which translate a good deal less effectively. This film involves Greenaway himself as narrator as he visits Rembrandt's Night Watch painting from a forensic point of view with the intention of using the content of the painting to unravel the crime whose story is told in the painting. I don't have the vaguest idea whether there is any truth to this, or even whether the characters in and around the painting are who he says they are (or even existed!). It could all be complete and utter balderdash. But it makes a fascinating movie to watch and, on that basis alone, I count it a success.

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  • Learn about art history

    sfdphd2018-06-16

    If you're wondering whether or not to become an art historian, watch this film to help you make the decision. You will either be inspired or realize that art history is not for you. Greenaway examines Rembrandt's painting to such an intense degree that it can seem ludicrous or amazingly astute. He identifies 34 so-called Mysteries about the painting and explains his theories about these mysteries. I personally found many of his theories far-fetched but was fascinated that someone would go the extent that he went in analyzing a single painting.

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  • Valid conspiracy theory or not, it is exquisite

    random-707782019-03-22

    I share Greenaway's fascination with the the Icarus and Daedalus flight myth, thew way they have been portrayed in art, and heartily recommend the print monographs he has done on that topic. Greenaway takes us full off the rails with J'Accuse. It is all his visual interpretation skills applied to what maybe an insane and paranoid conspiracy theory, or an intentional puzzle left for us by the genius of Rembrandt. is he right or wrong? Take your pick. Are we delving into the hidden mind of Rembrandt, or solely into Greenaways point of view? In the end it doesn't matter. It is the journey Greenaway takes us though, which is undeniably exquisite.

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  • Greenaway far away?

    stensson2009-12-29

    He has his big fascination for the 1600s and his movies have many times been composed like a painting from the time. Both the arrangement of actors, the light and the color. This time Greenaway seems to have taken the full consequences of it and presents the story behind Rembrandt's "Nightwatching" as some kind of detective plot. Cynical, brutal of course and with lots of naked bodies. But there's mannerism in it now and letting the actors use a body language and way of talking like it was today, has this time stopped functioning. Greenaway is now in desperate need of renewing his arrangements, his lights and his colors. We are slowly having enough.

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