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1[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/turner.jpg]]
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3''Mr. Turner'' is a 2014 {{biopic}} about the British painter J.M.W Turner, directed by Creator/MikeLeigh. Turner is portrayed by Creator/TimothySpall.
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5Turner is a popular {{painter|s}} in the early-to-mid 1800s, but beneath his well-respected reputation lies a tortured mind. At odds with much of his family, he spends his time alone with his work except when he occasionally exploits his housekeeper, who is secretly in love with him. The film follows Turner as he travels the countryside, stirs controversy among the artistic establishment, and pursues a romance with a widow.
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7For his work in the film, Spall won the Best Actor award at Cannes.
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9!! This film provides examples of:
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11* AmbiguousDisorder: As Turner ages, he becomes ever more ill-mannered and eccentric. It's implied that he's senile by the end of the film.
12* AttentionWhore: Turner's antics at the Royal Academy show definite signs of this.
13* DeadpanSnarker: Turner and several of his artist friends.
14* DesperatelyCravesAffection: A likely motive for Turner's awful behavior.
15* DownerEnding: [[spoiler: Turner dies at an old age, tortured by illness and possibly insane. Both of the women in his life are left heartbroken and alone.]]
16* EntitledBastard: Turner, whose ego is immense and he largely goes around doing as he pleases because people make allowances for his brusqueness as they're amazed by his art.
17* GeniusSlob: Turner is perpetually unkempt and he doesn't care much for politeness or decorum when he works as he snarls and spits at his canvas while painting. His nails are also so large and dirty[[note]]he was famous for using his nails to scrape and shape paint[[/note]] that others openly marvel at them.
18* GiftedlyBad: Turner is an acclaimed artist but he is an atrocious public speaker who stutters and stumbles when giving a lecture at the Royal Academy of Arts.
19* GratuitousRape: Turner randomly rapes his maid and it's never mentioned again.
20* TheHeroDies: [[spoiler: If you can call Turner a hero.]]
21* HisOwnWorstEnemy: Turner's problems are all the result of his own actions; if he simply bothered to treat others better, he would be enormously more respected by everyone from his family to his fellow artists.
22* HistoricalDomainCharacter: Turner, obviously, but also numerous other figures from the era. The most prominent ones include:
23** Benjamin Haydon, a painter who begs Turner for a loan. Though he committed suicide during the period of the film, this isn't mentioned presumably because Turner is senile and isolated by then.
24** Mary Sommerville, a natural philosopher who demonstrates her theories about the magnetizing effects of light to Turner and his father.
25** John Ruskin, a prominent art critic depicted here in his youth as a pretentious, irritating and spoiled fanatic of Turner's work.
26** John Jabez Edwin Mayall, an early photographer who takes Turner's picture near the end of the film and also took numerous famous portraits of real people like Karl Marx and Queen Victoria.
27** John Constable, a fellow painter whom Turner antagonizes.
28** Joseph Gillott, a wealthy pen manufacturer who tries to buy Turner's entire portfolio.
29** Queen Victoria and Prince Albert themselves, who deride Turner's increasingly abstract work.
30* InsufferableGenius: Turner, though he often manages to hide it.
31* JerkAss: Perhaps Turner's defining trait.
32* KickTheDog: Everything Turner does to his housekeeper, Danby.
33* ManChild: Turner, especially when we see him in the Royal Academy.
34* MeanBoss: Turner, towards Hannah Danby. He ignores her until he needs something and expects her to fulfill his every whim without question, even if it's sexual in nature.
35* MoralityPet: Turner is shown to be genuinely loving toward his father and Mrs. Booth, and has a genuine friendship with Mary Sommerville, respecting her accomplishments as a natural philosopher in a time when women had little opportunity in science.
36* ParentalNeglect: Turner refuses to admit that he's fathered two daughters and pointedly ignores them whenever their mother brings them along to demand financial support.
37* PetTheDog: On the other hand, Turner seems genuinely loving toward Sophia Booth. He also impulsively gives Haydon a handout near the end of the film.
38* PlatonicProstitution: Turner visits a brothel to sketch the prostitutes.
39* RandomEventsPlot: The films consists of a series of mostly disconnected vignettes from across multiple decades of Turner's life, many of which are mundane or miscellaneous things like having his picture taken and meeting with acquaintances, without a particular driving force or conflict behind them. Instead the film serves to illustrate Turner's psychology and the society he lived in.
40* SceneryPorn: Both Turner's {{paintings}} and the film itself.
41* SourOutsideSadInside: The key element of Turner's character. His misanthropic, cruel personality hides a mind tortured by loss, insecurity about sexuality, and fears about his art.
42* TrueArtIsIncomprehensible: Turner's reputation as an artist starts to suffer when his style becomes more abstract and people more used to realism don't understand his vision[[note]]Turner was obsessed with light and he'd stare directly at light sources -- including the sun -- to try and understand how they interacted with the environment. There is speculation that this habit permanently damaged his eyesight and that the abstractions of his later work were representations of how he was actually seeing the world[[/note]].

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