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A Bigger Splash

  • 1973
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 46m
IMDb RATING
5.9/10
712
YOUR RATING
David Hockney in A Bigger Splash (1973)
BiographyDocumentaryDrama

Semi-fictionalized documentary biopic of British artist David Hockney. After a difficult break-up, Hockney is left unable to paint, much to the concern of his friends. Titled after Hockney's... Read allSemi-fictionalized documentary biopic of British artist David Hockney. After a difficult break-up, Hockney is left unable to paint, much to the concern of his friends. Titled after Hockney's pop-art painting 'A Bigger Splash'.Semi-fictionalized documentary biopic of British artist David Hockney. After a difficult break-up, Hockney is left unable to paint, much to the concern of his friends. Titled after Hockney's pop-art painting 'A Bigger Splash'.

  • Director
    • Jack Hazan
  • Writers
    • Jack Hazan
    • David Mingay
  • Stars
    • David Hockney
    • Peter Schlesinger
    • Celia Birtwell
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.9/10
    712
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Jack Hazan
    • Writers
      • Jack Hazan
      • David Mingay
    • Stars
      • David Hockney
      • Peter Schlesinger
      • Celia Birtwell
    • 14User reviews
    • 20Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 win & 1 nomination total

    Photos20

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    Top cast19

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    David Hockney
    David Hockney
    • Self
    Peter Schlesinger
    • Self
    Celia Birtwell
    • Self
    Henry Geldzahler
    • Self (Collector)
    Mo McDermott
    • Self (Friend)
    Kasmin
    • Self (Dealer)
    Mike Sida
    • Self
    Ossie Clark
    • Self (Dress Designer)
    Susan Brustman
    • Self
    Patrick Procktor
    • Self
    Betty Freeman
    • Self
    Nick Wilder
    • Self
    Joe McDonald
    • Self
    Edward Kalinski
    • Self
    • (as Eddie Kalinski)
    Gregory
    • Self
    Jimmy
    • Self
    Mark
    • Self
    Chris
    • Self
    • Director
      • Jack Hazan
    • Writers
      • Jack Hazan
      • David Mingay
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews14

    5.9712
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    Featured reviews

    9govinda22

    Why the bad reviews?!

    Ive saved this film to my watchlist for a long time, saving it for when i can appreciate watching it rather than background noise.

    I rather liked the film. You have to know Hockney and his works to understand it. Yes it dragged in parts but i didnt mibd that, its artistic not a full on gangster shoot out.

    It was nice seeing full male nudity on screen as this is very rare even these days, it makes a change to see instead of naked women all the time.

    Great to see ossie and Celia in the film..sadly ossie passed away in the 90s and this is a rare bit of footage of him.

    The premise of the film is simple enough, but done in hockneys own artistic way. I liked it as much as his art.
    ptb-8

    Floating life, really

    Often just one watt above tedious, this sluggish yet occasionally fascinating doco about Brit artist David Hockney and the creation of his California Pool paintings clashing with the breakup of the young man of his poolside fancies makes for maddening viewing. Maybe it should have been 80 minutes instead of 108. However what is there is always just about to be really interesting and perhaps now in 2011, forty years after filming it is a 'record of the time' as opposed to 'that boring documentary'. In a strange way I found the London flats and wet cold streets and domestic shuffling about on cold mornings or dull afternoons all quite evocative, and gave me a true feeling for 'that day there then' which I rather liked... but up until the point that each scene really went nowhere and Hockney's affected style and goggle glasses were almost just a stunt of his own life. It really is just a portrait of a very ordinary man who happens to be able to paint quite interesting early 70s imagery of his time.... and the fact that the film contains quite explicit nudity to zap it all awake occasionally. The California scenes at the pool are quite beautiful especially now they are 40 years ago, and offer a diversion from the grey London life. They also allow the great paintings to come to life, which is well realised. Jack Hazan, the producer and director clearly has created a quality film of excellent production values (35mm and good sound) and it is to him that the film actually belongs. One scene when Hockney slashes then cuts up one canvas will make art dealers scream with horror at the value being shredded. The film overall is a valentine to Hockney 1971-3 and viewed 40 years later is one of which they alone could be proud. I thought of Ken Russell and the era of his British film productions of the early 70s. It seemed to be the world Russell might also inhabit. I found A BIGGER SPLASH to be very pedestrian yet I wanted to watch it all to see if it got any more interesting. in the end it wasn't but I did get a strong feel of the times and place and I did like that... but that is Jack Hazan's work, not Hockney's. It is all really just a very well captured home movie of Brit life in cold flats in 1971.
    7gradyharp

    Some Insights into the Creative Process of David Hockney

    Jack Hazan's quasi-documentary A BIGGER SPLASH is an unfocused examination about the creative life of David Hockney and supposedly about the effect of his past relationship with his pupil Peter Schlesinger (an artist, sculptor, and photographer who Hockney not only enjoyed as a lover but as a disciple). The précis appears to be that Hockney, in the throes of disappointment about the dissolution of his affair with Peter, decides to move to California where he has already been established as a painter of California people and places.

    In London we meet his friends - Celia Birtwell, the elegantly stylishly beautiful model Hockney used repeatedly, dress designer Ossie Clark, confidant Mo McDermott, and patron Henry Geldzahler - each of whom Hockney painted and drew. We watch as Hockney visits the galleries and admires works of his friends, how he paints in his studio, how he relates to his gallerists (like Paul Kasmin), and how he perceives men and other artists.

    Peter Schlesinger figures prominently in the film with many episodes of Peter's swimming in the pools of the people Hockney would eventually immortalize. He is a fine presence and carries his silent role well - almost appearing as a ghost muse that keeps Hockney focused on his now infamous swimming pool paintings.

    The magic of this film, for those to whom Hockney is a well known and important painter, is the visual recreation of the paintings that have made him so famous: we are allowed to see Celia and her husband with white cat in context with the canvas, the view of Peter staring into the pool at an under water swimmer, the woman and her animal heads who appears in another of Hockney's famous paintings at poolside, etc. This kind of cinematic background is valuable now and will prove invaluable to the archives of David Hockney. For those people this is a must-see film, despite its meandering technique and choppy editing. For others, it may seem too self-indulgent.
    cllrdr-1

    Brilliant, Beautiful and Genuinely Unusual Documentary

    Artist David Hockney is such a lively colorful figure that one might expect a film about his life and art to be a bubbly romp. But Jack Hazan takes quite a different route. He followed Hockney and his circle of friends around for quite a considerable amount of time -- shooting in 35mm, rather than 16mm as was popular for documentary films at this time. Moreover, rather than aim for a "cinema verite" styled "truth," Hazan deals in fantasy and melodrama. The action covers a period in which Hockney and his lover and model, Peter Schlesinger, are breaking up. Hockney is having what appears to be a somewhat difficult time finishing a large canvas for which Schlesinger was the subject, and Hazan suggests that the end of the relationship played a part in this difficulty. But he only suggests. He doesn't offer a set conclusion. What he does do is utilize film as means of entering Hockney's visual world. Many of his close friends and associates, including Ozzie Clark, Celia Birtwell, Patrick Procktor and Henry Geldzahler make appearances conversing with Hockney -- whose verbal wit is everywhere apparent. Most daring of all is scene in which Schlesinger and another young man make love.

    When he finally saw the results Hockney was both surprised and slightly appalled. "Two hours of weeping music," he called it. No surprise as "A Bigger Splash" gets a lot closer to Hockney's inner and outer life than he probably imagined it would.

    A very important film for art lovers, and a very important piece of gay cinema.
    seemingly_reel

    Intriguing glance at Hockney in the early 70s

    Seems that IMdB reviewers either hate or appreciate this film. As for me, I savored particular portions of this somewhat disjointed, dreamlike take on the early 1970s when Hockney was already thriving, while revealing glimmers of increased fame in the following decades. The choice of classical music was quite interesting throughout, and included snippets of operas... the vibe felt a bit over wrought, but it actually worked. Over the years, I've come to find Hockney to be an insightful, gifted, and innovative artist. His outlook towards using new technological inventions is admirable, and he has educated others on old master techniques and tools.

    The camera (whether still frame or cinematic) makes the wide majority of subjects self-conscious. Even when they try to "be on their best", the viewer can interpret this "cover up" according to their own filters. For me, one of the most effective scenes in this film was when the art dealer Kasmin was trying to persuade Hockney to speed up his output so that the lusty whims of art collectors could be satisfied. Hockey appears slightly bemused and his face teases while he endures his gallerist's guidance. This push-pull dilemma is an age old struggle whenever an artist engages others to commercially sell their work. The rhythms of a successful artist's life are no longer their own.

    As enticing and lovely as the fashion show segment was, I found it extended and a bit deflated. There were segments of the main characters coming and going to Hockney's place or to Celia's flat which felt stale. For anyone interested in Hockney, his comrades, and gay life in London during the early 70s, I would recommend this movie. Be forewarned though, the pace of some scenes drag, and there are fawning long takes of several choice people which unfortunately decrease the potential for surprise.

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    Drama

    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Connections
      Featured in Who Gets to Call It Art? (2006)

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    FAQ17

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • October 16, 1974 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United Kingdom
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Большой всплеск
    • Filming locations
      • Kensington Gallery, London, England, UK
    • Production companies
      • Buzzy Enterprises
      • Circle Associates Ltd.
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • £20,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $95,826
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $18,000
      • Jun 23, 2019
    • Gross worldwide
      • $130,327
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 46m(106 min)
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.66 : 1

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