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Wednesday, Jul 29, 1998
Montparnasse 19
Becker's biopic, released in the U.S. as Modigliani, is based loosely upon this Italian artist's last days in Paris. Played by Gérard Philipe, Modi, as he is called, is a brooding drunkard, little recognized for his stylized portraits of street denizens. He is wracked by self-doubt which is destructively realized through trysts with a wicked English writer, Beatrice (Lilli Palmer). Modi's pact with dissolution seems sealed until he meets an aspiring bourgeois artist, Jeanne, cast in the angelic countenance of Anouk Aimee. Becker reconstitutes the bohemian life of Paris with decorative accuracy-the cafes where Modigliani sketches, the exhibition at the Gallery B. Weill, the modeling sessions at the Academy. In the most startling episode, an American tycoon suggests that Modi's painting would make the ideal label for a new perfume-a suggestion from which the painter flees in outrage. Montparnasse 19 is really about a wrecked man unable to rise above the gravity of his failure. In the sad gestures of Philipe (who himself would soon die), we realize that Modigliani's paintings are the artifacts of a fall.-Steve Seid
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