Fireworks Logo

Trailers...

  • Ladybug
  • Jessica Fostekew: Wench
  • Qaid: No Wayyy Out
  • Cris Miró (Ella)
  • Happy Greetings
  • Lethal Love Affair
  • Love - am Ende zählst du
  • Luciano
  • Silent Sparks
  • Surf on, Europe!
  • Off Shoot
  • All We Ever Wanted
  • Carbon & Water
  • Birth of the Death of God (The)
  • Boy in a Dress: A Documentary
  • Mud Key
  • Herejes (Los)
  • Beautiful Evening, Beautiful Day
  • Cara Connors: Straight for Pay
  • Cupido confuso
  • Diamonds
  • Dreams
  • Edipo esclavo
  • French Girl
  • I Have to Die Every Night
  • Love Kills
  • My Summer with Irene
  • For Boys
  • Tripoli/A Tale of Three Cities
  • Family Album
  • Another Summer Holiday
  • Boy with Pink Trousers (The)
  • Clear Nights
  • Cranko
  • Eric
  • Mr. Sleepy
  • Prodigy (The)
  • Pink Lady
  • I Am Not Big Bird
  • Life and Death of Lily Savage (The)

Velvet Buzzsaw

Country: USA, Language: English, 109 mins

  • Director: Dan Gilroy
  • Writer: Dan Gilroy
  • Producer: Jennifer Fox

CGiii Comment

What an unmitigated disaster this film is...

It doesn't know what it is. It's not a horror...not scary in the slightest. It's not a comedy...not funny [apart from one line]. And, it's most definitely not a satire...satire requires a certain amount of intelligence...this has none.

So...the hype [aka: The USP] surrounding this film is/was: Jake Gyllenhaal goes gay and bares his bum! He's 'gay' for 5 minutes and [then] promptly becomes a feverishly devoted heterosexual. Lovely as it is, his bum gets 5 whole seconds of screen-time.

John Malkovich is - ridiculously - under-used. Toni Collette is - stupidly - under-employed. Zawe Ashton shouldn't have been used at all...what a terrifically dismal and wooden performance she delivers. She and the writer/director - clearly - out of their respective depths.

It is a film about [the interpretation of] art...and, the art is [according to this layman's opinion] - surprisingly and genuinely - good. Pity about everything else!

The Art World deserves to be mocked, ridiculed and provoked. Thankfully, their 'influences' rarely reach into the pockets of ordinary working folks. They have created an elite [of finance, snobbery and taste] all for their self-centred-selves. A well-executed exhibition of their frivolous foibles is always a welcome treat...unfortunately, this [horrendously titled] film is not it!


Trailer...

The(ir) Blurb...

In the cutthroat world of fine-art trading and representation, up-and-coming agent Josephina (Zawe Ashton) stumbles across a secret weapon: hundreds of dazzling paintings left behind after an elderly tenant in her building dies. Ignoring the instructions the clandestine artist left to destroy his work, she promptly starts circulating the paintings, which soon attract the attention of the heavy hitters around her—including her boss Rhodora (Rene Russo), art critic (and Josephina’s sometime lover) Morf (Jake Gyllenhaal), and competing collectors, managers, and curators like Bryson (Billy Magnussen) and Gretchen (Toni Collette). Yet as the deceased artist’s portraits gain posthumous acclaim, they also awaken something imperceptible and sinister that threatens to punish those who have profited from his work.

Master of suspense Dan Gilroy (Nightcrawler) has assembled an all-star cast for this dark, uproarious, and painfully accurate spoof of the art world. With strong supporting turns by John Malkovich, Daveed Diggs, and Natalia Dyer, Velvet Buzzsaw invites us into a traditionally insular world that’s suddenly splattered wide open, where art and commerce collide with dire consequences.

Cast & Characters

Jake Gyllenhaal as Morf Vandewalt;
Zawe Ashton as Josephina;
Rene Russo as Rhodora Haze;
Tom Sturridge as Jon Dondon;
John Malkovich as Piers;
Billy Magnussen as Bryson;
Natalia Dyer as Coco;
Toni Collette as Gretchen;
Daveed Diggs;
Peter Gadiot as Ricky Blane;
Mig Macario as Cloudio;
Mark Steger as Hoboman;
Cass Bugge as Ghostly Mother;
James Aston Lake as Ghostly Father;
Valentina Gordon as Ghostly Daughter;
Oz Kalvan as Ghostly Son;
Jasmin Marsters as Young Gallery Woman;
Sydney Lemmon as Jon Dondon Gallerist;
Pamela Shaddock as Museum Curating Woman;
Rob Brownstein as Museum Curating Man