DVD : Love is the Devil: Study for a Portrait of Francis Bacon
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Aspect Ratio: 1.33:1
Audience Rating: Unrated
Binding: DVD
EAN: 9786305847045
Format: Color, DVD-Video, NTSC
ISBN: 6305847045
Label: Strand Releasing
Manufacturer: Strand Releasing
Number Of Items: 1
Publisher: Strand Releasing
Region Code: 1
Release Date: April 04, 2000
Running Time: 90 minutes
Sales Rank: 6454
Studio: Strand Releasing
Theatrical Release Date: October 07, 1998
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Average Rating: 
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I was very satisfied with this movie. The discription was accurate and the transaction was pleasant. All in all, a very good experience.
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Last week I was going through my very old copies of Tatler, Harper's & Queen, and Vogue magazines (British issues) and found one with a review of this film. My old issues go back 15 years some of them. I read the review and saw the list of the actors names and said, "I've got to get this." After looking at it today, I am so glad I came across the review, because I would never have seen it otherwise.
I am not a Francis Bacon fan. His work, like Freud, leaves me uninspired. Jean Michel Basquiat, on the other hand, fires me up emotionally. After seeing the film I do want to see his retrospective next summer here in NYC at The Met. Perhaps then I WILL be inspired.
The film is just incredible. The writing, the photography, the editing, the music, the acting, absolutely wonderful. Faces who are now familiar to me would not have been when this film was made in the 90s. Craig, Swinton. Of course I knew and adored Derek Jacobi. He WAS Bacon. His looks, mannerisms, everything. The 'sex' scenes are tastefully done if that is the right word, and a lot is left to your imagination. The British really are the best actors and actresses in the world. There is no denying that.
The story is sad, disturbing and true. Like PRICK UP YOUR EARS, we get a fly-on-the-wall view of a forbidden London in the 60s. The gay scene that we would not have stumbled across had we not known the bars and clubs were there. The actors, all of them, were really ... Read More
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"Love is the Devil: Study for a Portrait of Francis Bacon"
A Strange Love Affair
Amos Lassen
When Daniel Craig was cast as the new James Bond there was a lot of interest in the 1998 film, "Love is the Devil" (Strand Releasing) because of his frontal nude scene in the film. The film, itself, is a somewhat short look at the very strange love affair between Francis Bacon (Derek Jacobi), an artist and his model/lover George Dyer (Daniel Craig). Dyer was the model for some of Bacon's most famous works and the film gives us an impressionist look at the relationship between the two men. Jacobi gives quite the performance embodying some of the artists real quirks including interaction with some very strange friends, brushing his teeth with ammonia, his masochistic bend and his sheer audacity. Visually and through characterization the movie is quite brilliant in its abstractions, darkness and cruelty.
Bacon is presented to us as a man who is disturbed and uncaring but he is also a genius who is not completely in control of himself. He used people, including Dyer, in order to succeed in the art world. However, his life plays second fiddle to the art scene at the time.
Craig as Dyer is also excellent and he falls victim to Bacon's strange ways as he becomes the artist's muse. As Dyer falls into alcohol and drugs as well as an abusive relationship, we become aware that he is heading toward the final fall--suicide.
Aside from the stars ... Read More
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I KNEW NOTHING ABOUT FRANCIS BACON. SO THE MOVIE WAS EDUCATIONAL. SOMETIMES MORE THAN I REALLY WANTED. D. CRAIG WAS MAGNIFICENT. A MUST FOR ALL THOSE WHO MIGHT BE INTERESTED IN ART AND ARTIST'S HISTORY AND A DICKENISH ENGLAND.
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This is a ridulous and manic amalgam of nonsense that fails to satisfy either a lust for Daniel Craig (the hook that made me purchase it) or an interest in Francis Bacon. You will not learn about the artist and you won't see much of Daniel Craig (yes, he's naked in the tub, but is that alone worth the purchase price?). What's more, you won't likely be engaged as there is nothing closely resembling a story arc. Perhaps the film-makers forgot to take there ritalin during production?! Too frenetic, too disjointed, and just...too much of nothing to connect with.
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