Reviews now on YouTube! | Watch here

Larsen On Film

  • Review Library
  • Subscribe
  • Why I’m Wrong
  • About
  • Books

Goya’s Ghosts

A curious case of miscasting undermines Goya’s Ghosts, a sprawling vision of Spanish history through the eyes of macabre painter Francisco Goya. For his title artist, a born-and-bred Spaniard, director Milos Forman tapped Swedish actor Stellan Skarsgard, then added Natalie Portman as a young Spanish woman who is swallowed up by the Inquisition and, as the topper, Randy Quaid as Spain’s King Carlos IV. The result is a bewildering melange of accents, faces and acting styles. At least Spanish actor Javier Bardem, on hand as a devious monk, lends some semblance of authenticity. With his drooping face and black eyes, Bardem looks like he was plucked from one of Goya’s later paintings, in which the sagging figures appeared to be in the midst of decomposition.

Recent Reviews

Together (2025)

Horror Rated R

“… eventually goes off the deep end, but without doing the work.”

One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest (1975)

Drama Rated R

“It’s McMurphy versus Ratched, but it might as well be Life versus Death.”

The Bad Guys 2 (2025)

Family Rated PG

“… limp jokes around the edges involve a Musk/Bezos billionaire figure and random cultural stereotypes.”


Search Review Library

Sponsored by the following | become a sponsor



SUBSCRIBE


Sign up to receive emails

Sign up to get new reviews and updates delivered to your inbox!

Please wait...

Thank you for signing up!




FOLLOW ONLINE



All rights reserved. All Content ©2024 J. Larsen
maintained by Big Ocean Studios

TOP