‘Modi, Three Days on the Wing of Madness’ Review: Johnny Depp’s Return to Directing Yields a Bland Biopic of a Tortured Artist

Johnny Depp hasn’t taken a directorial credit on a feature film (his 50-minute music video “Unloveable” doesn’t count) since he presented The Brave in Cannes in 1997, and that did not go well. Given that unhappy experience, you have to wonder what it was about Modi, Three Days on the Wing of Madness — a portrait of Amedeo Modigliani, a painter and sculptor famous for his talent as well as his taste for drugs, debauchery and scandalizing the straights — might have lured the actor to pick up the virtual megaphone again.

Perhaps Depp saw in Modigliani a kindred spirit? After all, Depp too is famous for his talent but also his proclivity for indulgence, which was brought into an especially glaring, unflattering light over the course of his bitter courtroom battle with his ex, Amber Heard. Still, there are many other wild, druggy geniuses or genius-adjacent types he could have chosen from to sanctify with cinema. Charles Baudelaire, say, or Samuel Taylor Coleridge, neither of whom have been biopicked over as much.

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It turns out, according to the movie’s own press notes, that this project was at one point slated to be directed by Depp’s friend and onetime Donnie Brasco co-star Al Pacino, who instead takes a key but supporting role here as art collector Maurice Gangnat. Pacino suggested to Depp that he helm instead, and that seems to have been that.

All of which might explain why Modi, Three Days on the Wing of Madness is, despite the floridity of its title and the bad behavior shown onscreen, a curiously bland package. All right, yes, there is a trip sequence where our protagonist, known as Modi (Riccardo Scamarcio) gulps down magic mushroom- and hashish-dosed wine with his girlfriend Beatrice Hastings (Antonia Desplat) and starts to see weird shapes in the sky as well as menacing apparitions. The two of them bicker a lot as well, and cuss words are tossed about along with crockery and some artworks Modi intends to destroy. But this is hardly Fear and Loathing in Montmartre. Ultimately, it’s essentially a decorative period piece for the art house circuit, but with more bodily secretions and property damage.

At least Modi is likely to go down better than Modigliani, the 2004 full-on biopic that starred Andy Garcia and was prone to the kind of cheesy “Oh, hello there, Pablo!” dialogue endemic in such fare. Modigliani did indeed know Picasso, Gertrude Stein, Jean Cocteau, Juan Gris and all those early 20th century Parisian avant-garde hepcats. But the script here — the unwieldy credits attribute it to Jerzy Kromolowski and Mary Olson-Kromolowski, but based on the play Modigliani by Dennis McIntyre and “with additional material by Johnny Depp, Stephen Deuters, Jason Forman and Sam Sarkar” — keeps almost all of them offstage.

Instead, Modigliani’s inner circle for the 72 hours of his life we see here consists, plausibly, of fellow artists Maurice Utrillo (Bruno Gouery) and Chaim Soutine (Ryan McParland), his art dealer Leopold Zborowski (Stephen Graham) and the aforementioned Hastings, who was a journalist-critic and Modi’s lover-model-roommate around 1916 when the story is set.

Strictly in contemporary storytelling terms, Hastings probably makes for a better choice of love interest rather than Jeanne Hebuterne — a woman considerably younger than Modi who married him shortly after the time depicted in Modi, and was so devoted to him that she killed herself, while heavily pregnant, a few days after he died from tuberculosis in 1920. Desplat’s Beatrice, on the other hand, is a more relatable modern woman before her time, insistent on focusing on her own career. The first time we meet her here, she’s locked Modi out because she’s on deadline and doesn’t want his distracting drama at that moment. Later, when he says he’s a real artist and she merely writes about art, she quite rightly hurls a blunt object at him. I, for one, could completely relate.

The movie in general is quite dismissive of any character who dares to hold anything less than passionate, uncritical enthusiasm for Modigliani’s work, which incidentally might be read as a preemptive snub to us mean old critics. Beatrice is the exception, which makes her character even more likable. The impeccably cast Desplat adroitly exudes Hastings’ intelligence, insecurity and fragile co-dependence with her lover. She even looks a fair bit like the woman with the closed eyes and flushed cheeks in Seated Nude, a picture now in the Courtauld Gallery in London, for which Hastings is thought to have been the model.

In fact, Desplat’s Hastings is sufficiently interesting, and underrepresented as a historical figure in cinema, that some viewers may find themselves sighing in frustration when she’s not onscreen. Most of the running time is devoted to painting a very traditional icon, practically a gesso on wood, of yet another tortured male genius. Scamarcio is just about charismatic enough to hold attention, but Modi’s trajectory here — a countdown over a few days as he waits to pitch to famed collector Gangnat — doesn’t take us terribly far toward understanding what makes him tick or even why we should care.

Like so many pictures about artists, be they visual artists or composers or even writers, Modi, Three Days on the Wing of Madness doesn’t dare to engage with any seriousness about craft, application and technique or any of the nitty-gritty stuff that truly makes their creations important. This sort of kitsch is more interested in the truly irrelevant sex, drugs and rock ‘n’ roll nonsense of biography, and the film doesn’t even pay the real Modigliani the compliment of securing the rights to show any of his actual pieces. All the work we see, as far as I could tell from the credits, are passable but not entirely convincing pastiches.

More investment seems to have gone into getting the rights to include snippets of songs by the Velvet Underground and Tom Waits. One suspects that’s the kind of art that really floats Depp’s boat, although it’s cheering to see the film giving work to British cabaret beat-combo the Tiger Lillies, who provide a delightful musical bedding of oompa-pah oompa-pah noodling that recalls the brass band tunes in Emir Kusturica movies.

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