Please check your email for new password and then log in here
Due to recent changes at Facebook, FilmDoo no longer supports integration with Facebook. If you have previously created an account using Facebook, please request a new password by entering the email associated with your Facebook account. You will then be sent a new password that you can now use to log in to continue using FilmDoo with your email.
If you have any problems, for example, you don't remember your email associated with your Facebook account, please drop us an email at info@filmdoo.com with name of your Facebook account.
Due to recent changes at Facebook, FilmDoo no longer supports integration with Facebook. Please sign up to create a new account using Google or your email.
Some movies are not yet available on FilmDoo in United States.
Let film makers know you want to see their film.
Help us bring this movie to you by clicking DooVOTE!
Start Watching!Rent this film for only $0.00!
Learn More? Check out the trailer!
Thank You! You have successfully DooVOTED this film.
Your DooVOTES help film makers know where there is demand for their films, making it easier for us to bring the film to you!
We will let you know once Hockney is available to watch where you are
Thank You! You have ADDED this film to YOUR WATCHLIST.
Your WATCHLIST helps keep track of all the films you want to see!
Hockney will now be on your WATCHLIST when you go to MY HISTORY on your VIEW PROFILE page.
You can watch this film if you are signed into FilmDoo from one of the countries in the list below:
Help Us Bring This Film To You! CLICK
You can watch this film if you are signed into FilmDoo from one of the countries in the list below:
Want to see this?
Hockney is the definitive exploration of one of the most significant artists of his generation. For the first time, David Hockney has given access to his personal archive of photographs and film, resulting in an unparalleled visual diary of a long life. The film chronicles his vast career, from his early life in working-class Bradford--where his love for pictures was developed through his admiration for cinema--to his relocation to Hollywood, where his lifelong struggle to escape labels (‘queer’, ‘working class’, ‘figurative artist’) was fully realised.
Paradoxically, this escape to live the American Dream did not break the ties to the childhood that formed him. We see his upbringing and life experiences give him the willpower to survive relationship problems, and later the AIDS epidemic, and also allow him to create some of the most renowned works of the past century.
Acclaimed filmmaker Randall Wright offers a unique view of this unconventional artist who is now reaching new peaks of popularity worldwide, as charismatic as ever, and at 77 still working in the studio seven days a week.
Thank you for you contribution, your post will go live once approved
by a moderator.
Thank you for you contribution, your post will go live once approved
by a moderator.