TRUE STORIES (1986)
In a recent interview on The Colbert Report, David Byrne admitted that edgy artists like himself often fear being normal and that while he’s “getting over it” now, there was a time when he was neurotic about enjoying ordinary things or being like everyone else. This brainy misfit’s ambivalence about the straight world enlivens the companion film of the 1986 Talking Heads album True Stories...or maybe the album was the companion to Byrne’s directorial debut about a small Texas town’s sesquicentennial “Celebration of Special-ness,” where the inhabitants (played by John Goodman, Swoosie Kurtz and fellow misfit Spalding Gray, among others) are viewed from a bemused, extraterrestrial distance by Byrne’s Our Town-ish narrator, who may or may not find the “common folk” around him fascinating, ridiculous, contemptible, endearing, inspiring and/or weirder than himself. It perhaps speaks to Byrne’s singular creative vision that I’ve never really seen another movie quite like True Stories, what with its largely plotless structure, catchy musical numbers (including the anthemic “Wild, Wild Life”) and dreamy visuals of late-night traffic stops, avant-garde fashions and a big stage in the middle of the desert where everyone, ultimately, seems welcome to fret and strut...unless the whole thing is really just an elaborate performance art put-on, full of sound and irony, signifying nothing.
THE HARDER THEY COME (1972)
The first feature made in Jamaica (by the late director Perry Henzell) stars Jimmy Cliff as an aspiring pop star who winds up on the run with a gun in his hand, which turns out to be an excellent career move. This movie didn't attract much attention at first when it opened in the States, but when it hit as a long-running midnight movie, its influence turned out to be lasting and deep, especially when its soundtrack album, featuring classics by the Maytals, the Melodians, and Desmond Dekker as well as four new songs by Cliff, instantly became everybody's favorite compact reggae sampler. The film itself captures a world never before seen on film: a sun-baked lanscape where people who dress in bright Pop-Art colors live in squalid poverty row landscapes, so that it makes a kind of sense that someone could cross over from aspiring singer to public enemy number one as easily as crossing the street.
PAYDAY (1973)
Rip Torn makes the most of his rare starring role as Maury Dann, a country music celebrity crossing the country one low-rent concert date at a time in a two-car caravan. Directed by Daryl Duke from an original script by the novelist Don Carpenter, this movie doesn't exactly celebrate music or the musician's life: nobody would have bought the soundtrack album, if the studio had bothered to release one. But it's just about peerless as a snapshot of the second- or third-tier musician's life at its least rewarding. The expert supporting cast includes one of the long-lost great character actresses of the '70s, Ahna Capri, perfectly cast as the one mistress likely to not only stand up to Torn but finally push him too far.
SONGWRITER (1984)
Bud Shrake, the sportswriter and journalist who later co-wrote Willie Nelson's autobiography, cooked up this script for Nelson and Kris Kristofferson to star in; a comic celebration of the sagacity and self-preservation skills of a uniquely self-reliant and unstable race of people, it looks as if Shrake and his buds had read one too many references in the music press to country music "outlaws" and thought, You want outlaws, I'll give you outlaws. The film is also graced with one of the funniest of Rip Torn's wild man turns as a bearded music promoter who is not above armed robbery when his attempts to collect all the money in the surrounding area through less threatening means of persuasion prove unsuccessful. The only way this movie could be more entertaining would be if Torn's character had been able to face off against his character from Payday in a steel cage death match.
BANDWAGON (1996)
Ah, to be young and naive and forming a band for the first time! John Schultz, who has made nothing but bottom-feeding Hollywood dreck ever since, directed this film about young people who are a little naive and the band they form and take on the road. Kevin "If I'm In It, It Debuted At Sundance" Corrigan and Doug "Lead Singer of the Connells" MacMillan are about as close as this movie gets to having name actors. It has the common problems of many a little debut indie film, such as amateurish actors and an occasional loss of focus. These are all forgiveable sins. The way that Schultz captures the feeling of the road is inspired and obviously the result of hard-earned wisdom. There's the initial thrill, then the frustration of playing gigs for not quite enough people to call your audience a "handful," the sheer pleasure of making music, the growing realization that you can't stand some of the people you make music with, the tedium, the smell, the damn van that keeps breaking down, the poverty, the ashtrays, floors, dirty clothes, and filthy jokes. Makes one grow nostalgic, is what it does. Schultz was the original drummer of The Connells, and I realize that I should explain that The Connells were (or are? Are they still a going concern?) a North Carolina-based indie rock band who produced a fine string of power pop albums throughout the '80s and into the '90s. I don't think it's a stretch to say that Bandwagon is the result of his time on the road with his band. Anyway, the plot is simple: Tony has written some songs about a girl named Ann. Tony and some acquaintances put a band together and go on tour. A record label is interested in them, but they are a little dubious. There's some lovely details along the way, such as Tony's stage fright, which leads him to play with his back to the audience. When Corrigan's character Wynn gets upset, he wants to go fishing, anywhere and now. The purely symbolic act of placing a guitar on train tracks has the sudden and obvious conclusion. When Ann shows up, she likes Tony's most obnoxious bandmate more than him. Great stuff, and sadly hard-to-find at the moment.
Click Here For Part One, Two, Four & Five
Contributors: Andrew Osborne, Phil Nugent, Hayden Childs