I saw the movie made from Stone's novel ....
with Charlton Heston and Rex Harrison. The movie was not bad, but I've seen Heston in so many of these roles ... Harrison as the warrior Pope was quite good but understandably different from Henry Higgins.
I read the book about Van Gough. I think it's called Lust for Life. I had more interest in Van Gough than Michaelangelo. The book was extremely depressing, but Vincent led a very depressing life, then committed suicide. The movie of this one was much better than Agony et al. Van Gough was played by Kirk Douglas and his roomate, Paul Gauguin, was acted by Anthony Quinn. If you look at some of Vincent's earlier works,such as The Potato Eaters, you can see how he was affected by the poor and disinherited.
In my opinion, Stone's biographies are too wordy, and too full of the heartache experienced by his subjects. A much better approach to an artist biography was taken by W. Somerset Maugham in the Moon and Sixpence,the fictional biography of Paul Gauguin. Maugham holds back no punches, but his biograhy, albeit fictional to a certain extent, does not dwell interminably on a wasted life (Gauguin died of leprosy contracted in the south Pacific) The black and white movie of the Maugham novel was quite good, starring George Sanders, who in real life was a bounder and a cad, as Gauguin was.
Janine .... with over 8,000 posts,
I don't think you are the proper judge of wordiness.