Loving Vincent – Official Trailer



LOVING VINCENT is the world’s first fully oil painted feature film. Written & directed by Dorota Kobiela & Hugh Welchman. Coming to Australian cinemas, November 2.

The film brings the paintings of Vincent van Gogh to life to tell his remarkable story. Every one of the 65,000 frames of the film is an oil-painting hand-painted by 125 professional oil-painters who travelled from all across the world to the Loving Vincent studios in Poland and Greece to be a part of the production. As remarkable as Vincent’s brilliant paintings, is his passionate and ill-fated life, and mysterious death.

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36 thoughts on “Loving Vincent – Official Trailer”

  1. if this was ever created into a movie with real people, i hope they cast the man that played vincent in doctor who. trust me he would be the best man for the job, beautiful film though i enjoyed watching it but got emotional during it

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  2. People wondering and comparing Coco with this movie shouldn't even be comparing them. They're very different and the Oscars are terrible. Coco had good cultural representation with Dia de los Muertos and was animated by Disney on a computer. Loving Vincent was made to form a story around Gough's paintings and the mystery surrounding him, and was animated using hand-painted oil paintings. The category for animation should be changed to include both of these. I'm sure many of us are aware that the Oscar judges supposedly only watch the Disney, Pixar, Dreamworks, etc. movies, so obviously those choices are biased. If you were to separate them into groups – an animation award focusing on the story elements, and an award focusing on the work put into it or perhaps a category for each age rating would narrow it down and force the judges to make a decision. I'll admit even as a fan of this movie, the story itself is interesting but not as stimulating as Coco's which is fast-paced, humorous and musical with a textbook beginning middle and end making it easy for younger children to have handle on the story, having bright colors and fun physics with the skeletons as well as a darker backstory with _actual murder_. Loving Vincent had a constant feeling of something dark looming over everything as the main character searches for what may have happened to Vincent as he delivers a letter, there are mentions are suicide and even a man who points a gun to himself to see if Vincent could have actually killed himself in that manner, and scenes where he's cut off his ear and is bleeding all over his bed, and spoilers even by the end, the mystery is still left ambiguous as we really don't have an answer. This movie is one of the best I can think of for the ANIMATION category, so much effort and dedication is put into something like this. Coco's animation doesn't have to create each frame by scratch, despite it being beautiful as well, so if not categories based on rating, then categories based on animation. Examples of this could be Traditional: Beauty and the Beast, Song of the Sea, A Silent Voice. Modern/3D (or something to that effect): Coco, Into the Spider-verse, How to Train Your Dragon. Unique (having a very stylized look or method of animation like claymation): Loving Vincent, Anomalisa, The Secret of Kells. (You may disagree on some of those choices but those are just examples made by one person, which if taken to an Oscar-level should go through multiple "proofreading" stages.) These two films are completely different and should not be compared on the same level.

    Sorry for the long post, just had to rant a bit, so it might be disjointed-sounding here and there. I hope I got the point across at least.

    TLDR: Coco and Loving Vincent are so different in subject matter and animation that the Oscars should just create different subcategories under animation so they can't be biased with the Disney movies and ignore animation masterpieces.

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  3. to all who hated coco just because Loving Vincent losts to Coco

    both movies are good, u dont have the rights to dislike a movie just because loving vincent has lost to coco. i mean its people have different interests (well duh many people like disney)…

    edit: im not saying that i love disney than any movies… so dont at me pls

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  4. I can't say how much I loved this. One of those rare films that felt life-changing. I hope I keep it in my heart for a long time and wish I had seen it in the theater. You may be able to watch it for free with your library card using the Kanopy app as we did.

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  5. I just few days ago watched this on Netflix. I saw this at the front page some days ago and thought "Oh well, animation looks cool, I might watch this for 10 minutes just for the animation..".
    So, few days later before I planned on getting to bed I decided to watch few minutes of it.

    Soon I realized 30minutes had passed and I didnt want to stop watching! The animation was incredible ad the story had been delivered so well.

    After I finished the movie, very late at night, I decided to take my painting equipment out that had been collecting dust.
    I started painting and the first thing that came to my mind was sunflowers in a vase. To my surprise the painting was quite beautiful, considering that I pretty much never paint.

    Thanks to him and this amazing film I found my passion to paint!

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  6. Imagine Vincent's soul wandering the earth and he came across a memorial museum in Amsterdam in his honor and he saw people watching this film. Pretty much the same reaction from Doctor Who.

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  7. The fact the makers of this film used oil painting animation with real actors instead of the usual cartoon animation or live action is phenomenal. I'm pretty sure they used it in honor of Vincent Van Gogh.

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  8. i know its a surprise to a lot of people. his life has been a inpration to me i was so excited to paint after watching this wonderful movie i had to i had no choice i still am pushed like Vincent was to create and make the world a littler bitter than it was

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  9. It’s saddening that Coco won over this masterpiece but it’s insulting that it was nominated alongside The Boss Baby and Ferdinand. The only other movie worth the nomination was The Breadwinner

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