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IMDbPro

The Picasso Summer

  • 1969
  • M/PG
  • 1h 30m
IMDb RATING
5.2/10
391
YOUR RATING
Albert Finney and Yvette Mimieux in The Picasso Summer (1969)
AdventureDrama

A San Francisco couple travels to France in search of Pablo Picasso.A San Francisco couple travels to France in search of Pablo Picasso.A San Francisco couple travels to France in search of Pablo Picasso.

  • Directors
    • Robert Sallin
    • Serge Bourguignon
  • Writers
    • Ray Bradbury
    • Edwin Boyd
    • Wes Herschensohn
  • Stars
    • Albert Finney
    • Yvette Mimieux
    • Luis Miguel Dominguín
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.2/10
    391
    YOUR RATING
    • Directors
      • Robert Sallin
      • Serge Bourguignon
    • Writers
      • Ray Bradbury
      • Edwin Boyd
      • Wes Herschensohn
    • Stars
      • Albert Finney
      • Yvette Mimieux
      • Luis Miguel Dominguín
    • 19User reviews
    • 9Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos1

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    Top cast20

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    Albert Finney
    Albert Finney
    • George Smith
    Yvette Mimieux
    Yvette Mimieux
    • Alice Smith
    Luis Miguel Dominguín
    • Dominguin
    • (as Luis Miguel Dominguin)
    Peter Madden
    Peter Madden
    • Blind Man
    Jim Connell
    Jim Connell
    • The Artist
    Tutte Lemkow
    Tutte Lemkow
    • Drunk
    Marty Ingels
    Marty Ingels
    • Man at Party
    Graham Stark
    Graham Stark
    • Postman
    Theodore Marcuse
    Theodore Marcuse
    • The Host
    • (as Theo Marcuse)
    Stephen Scott
    • German Tourist
    Kathryn Reynolds
      Miki Iveria
      Miki Iveria
      • Blind Man's Wife
      Bee Duffell
      • German Tourist
      Sopwith Camel
      • Sopwith Camel
      Lucia Bosè
      Lucia Bosè
      • Guest George Smith Explains Why He Wants to Meet Picasso
      • (uncredited)
      Georgina Cookson
      Georgina Cookson
      • British Woman at Dinner
      • (uncredited)
      Dorsay Dujon
      • Singer at SF party.
      • (uncredited)
      Duke Fishman
      Duke Fishman
      • Pablo Picasso
      • (uncredited)
      • Directors
        • Robert Sallin
        • Serge Bourguignon
      • Writers
        • Ray Bradbury
        • Edwin Boyd
        • Wes Herschensohn
      • All cast & crew
      • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

      User reviews19

      5.2391
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      Featured reviews

      tangoviudo

      In Pursuit of Picasso

      This unusual film is the collaboration of several creative forces - a Ray Bradbury story, with animation created by the Hubleys (directed and "conceived" by producer Wes Herschensohn), a spectacular musical score by Michel Legrand, and co-direction by the near-forgotten Serge Bourguignon (of "Sundays & Cybele"). Unfortunately, it doesn't appear as if all of these people were properly introduced to one another. A successful architect (Finney) decides to chuck it all and run off to the south of France to visit his favorite painter, Pablo Picasso. Alas, Pablo isn't welcoming visitors and despite several attempts at stalking him, our architect-hero finally gives up. Albert Finney gives a frenetic performance with Yvette Mimieux never looking more beautiful beside him. Nothing in the film has anything linear about it, which is probably to its advantage. It is part fiction film, part docu-drama, part art documentary (the amimated Picasso paintings are probably the only real excuse for it - and they often come off as over-literal interpretations of his work). Ah, well, there is the lush music and the Vilmos Zsigmond photography and the elusive spirit of Picasso. Worth watching at least once.
      4Bob-45

      Train wreck of a movie and a squander of the actor's talent.

      Originally completed in 1969 but not released by Warners Bros. TV division until 1972 and broadcast on CBS late night movie, "The Picasso Summer" demonstrates, in the most negative manner, what happens when a film director and the "groupthink" of the film's producers are in complete disagreement.

      Clocking in at a scant 90 minutes, 60 minutes of which are devoted to frequently tedious animation of Picasso's works, Warner Bros. would have been better served by entirely jettisoning the framing story, that of self-absorbed architect (Albert Finney) and his loving, long suffering wife (Yvette Mimieux). The framing story is reminiscent of the excellent 1967 film, "Two for the Road," which also starred Finney, but with Audrey Hepburn playing the long suffering wife. Hepburn and Mimieux project similar spiritual images, but Mimieux has the added bonus of a sexiness, of which Hepburn could only dream. Think of Jennifer Love Hewitt playing Hepburn (which she did, for a TV movie), but with Hepburn's acting abilities. Even so, most of that 30 scant minutes of live action consists of footage either of peripheral characters, "60's style artsy" footage of the Finney and Mimiuex observing Picasso's art, attending a "pop art" party (the film's worst live action sequence) or bicycling through France. Actual dramatic screen time between Finney and Mimieux clocks in at about 10 minutes.

      Fortunately, Warner Bros. did not jettison the live action sequences, because of a roughly 8 minute segment involving Mimieux, an elderly painter and his wife. Of the live action, that is one of the few segments which does not appear to be ugly work-print; and the two scenes are so profound, they make including the live action worthwhile.

      Given the talent involved, (Oscar-nominated Serge Bourguignon, five-time scar-nominated Albert Finney, two-time Golden Globe-nominated Yvette Mimieux, Hugo Award-winning classic fantasy/science fiction writer Ray Bradbury, three-time Oscar winner Michelle Legrand and Oscar-winner and multi-nominated cinematographer Vilmos Zsigmond, the fate of the "The Picasso Summer" seems especially tragic. However, if you do happen to come across "The Picasso Summer" and are not a particularly huge fan of Picasso (which, I am not), copy it and fast forward to the last twenty minutes, as they are worth the watch and are worthy of a "10" rather than the "4" I gave the movie overall.
      4mossgrymk

      picasso slumber

      I'd rather be in Guernica. Can you imagine how bad Serge Bourguignon's rough cut must have been for Warner Brothers to reject it in favor of this...what? Call it an R rated Rick Steves episode with stupid Picasso animated psychedelia alternating with dopey devices like the ol split screen/jigsaw puzzle as Albert Finney and Yvette Mimieux bike around southern France, swim in the Med and copulate at the Carlton. Kind of a "Two For The Road" for idiots. And good luck getting that syrupy Michel Legrand score out of your head anytime soon. I bailed right around the time Mimieux and Finney temporarily split up and suggest you do the same before that. C minus.
      7itsjoan

      Good film if about 30-40 minutes were edited out.

      Watching Picasso Summmer I think I can now accept that his work was not poking fun at wannabe art critics. For the 'uneducated eye' one has to wonder if what we're seeing...is how the artist is really viewing something; is it really a creative vision or a put on.

      I did come away with a glimmer of understanding and motivation to do some research and reading on Picasso after viewing the film. All I knew about him from an art appreciation class in school is that he had a 'Blue period'.

      As I said in the summary title, the morphing segments, while cleverly and creatively carried out, were way too many and way too long to sustain at least this casual viewer. The kernel of a good film was there, it just didn't 'pop.
      4robertlauter25

      Acclaimed?

      There are literally 3 reasons for watching this movie. Yvette Mimieux in a bikini, picasso's art made into cartoons and a bull fight, all can be achieved by watching 10 minutes of it on mute, to block out the grating, redundant score that drones on like a nagging woman during a hangover This whole film is a mess, that plays like a woodstock era porn film, only less entertaining.

      I hear all sorts of nonsense about Albert Finney agreeing to do the 1981 movie Looker ( a wonderful movie), yet somehow this monstrosity passes as legitimate cinema? The horrid story line plays like a travel column in readers digest. The split screen jigsaw puzzle, multi-spectrum cinema photography resembles a segment of Rowan and Martin's Laugh Inn, and the two leads seem really quite bored, which is no doubt how any sentient being will feel after slogging through 10 minutes of this mess.

      Evidently there where issues with the production of this film, directors fired, producer Bill Cosby demanding his name be removed, Picasso refusing to make an actual appearance and so forth, it certainly shows in the final product. I cannot emphasize enough the agony caused by the elevator music that accosts one throughout, the stale dialogue and idiotic story line. How this got any critical acclaim only shows how utterly, defunct so called professional movie criticism has always been. Simply Awful

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      Related interests

      Still frame
      Adventure
      Mahershala Ali and Alex R. Hibbert in Moonlight (2016)
      Drama

      Storyline

      Edit

      Did you know

      Edit
      • Trivia
        Producer Wes Herschensohn in his book "Resurrection in Cannes: The Making of The Picasso Summer" states that the final shot was filmed in Catalina, because it resembled the shores of Southern France. Mr. Herschensohn did the sand drawings and a local man named Duke Fishman played Picasso -he bore a striking resemblance to Picasso. He was somewhat of an artist himself and briefly able to continue Herschensohn's sand drawings for the camera.
      • Goofs
        The couple is implied to leave within 24 hours, without passport, shots, nor visa. It is doubtful those could be obtained for non-emergency reasons, even in 1969.
      • Quotes

        Luis Miguel Dominguín: There, you see. And, there. And there. Always the horses, the man, the bulls. One way or another, with oils or watercolors or etchings and now in clay. Picasso comes back to the arena. Because he is Spanish and because he cannot come back to Spain, he must come back in his own way. And so again and again, Picasso returns to the center of life in Spain, which is the bull-ring. You wish to see Picasso? Then you must enter that arena yourself - and fight a bull.

        George Smith: Do you think, eh, its absolutely necessary, in order to met Picasso, that I actually have to fight a bull?

        Luis Miguel Dominguín: Absolutely necessary!

        George Smith: Fine. Well, okay. I'll fight a bull.

      • Soundtracks
        Hey Ho The Wind and the Rain
        (uncredited)

        Lyrics by William Shakespeare from "Twelfth Night"

        Sung by Albert Finney

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      FAQ15

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      Details

      Edit
      • Release date
        • 1969 (United States)
      • Country of origin
        • United States
      • Languages
        • English
        • French
        • Spanish
        • German
      • Also known as
        • Picasso yazı
      • Filming locations
        • Nice, Alpes-Maritimes, France
      • Production companies
        • Campbell-Silver-Cosby Corporation
        • Warner Bros./Seven Arts
      • See more company credits at IMDbPro

      Tech specs

      Edit
      • Runtime
        • 1h 30m(90 min)
      • Sound mix
        • Mono
      • Aspect ratio
        • 1.78 : 1

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