Grand
Jury Prize - World Cinema Documentary Nominee at SUNDANCE
FILM FESTIVAL 2006
Genre:
Documentary
Director: Julien Temple
Starring: ColdPlay, Radiohead, Bjork, David
Bowie, James Brown, Chemical Brothers, Prodigy, David Grey,
The Killers, The White Stripes, Paul McCartney, REM, Morrisey
RunTime: 2 hrs 18 mins
Released By: Cathay-Keris Films
Rating: M18
Opening Day: 16 November 2006
Synopsis:
In 1970, a young farmer named Michael Eavis opened his 150-acre
farm to 1,500 people who paid one pound each to watch a handful
of pop and folk stars perform all weekend long, and the Glastonbury
Festival was born. The following year, several rich hippies,
including Winston Churchill's granddaughter, provided funds
to enlarge the event, and 12,500 people turned up to see David
Bowie and Joan Baez. For most of the past 30 years, the Worthy
Farm in Glastonbury has provided a delirious outdoor concert
for thousands of people over the summer-solstice weekend at
the end of June. Julien Temple, (director of the Sex Pistols
documentary The Filth and the Fury), has spent the past few
years collecting footage from every single Glastonbury Festival,
ranging from professional outtakes from the film Nicolas Roeg
made about the 1971 event to amateur home videos collected
from the attendees themselves, often retrieved from forgotten
corners of closets and attics.
Movie Review:
It is only at the 90-minute mark of this 135-minute documentary
that it dawned upon this reviewer that the entire film is
about the celebration of a spirit that leaves all inhibitions
and reserves behind. And it was a certain eccentric singer
named Bjork who did the job.
The Icelandic singer is just one of the many performers featured
in this documentary about Glastonbury Festival, Britain’s
best-known music festival. It is clear that she does not have
your typical powerhouse vocals to boast of. Heck, some may
even think that her unique singing style equates to total
trash.
This
is what it is all about, isn’t it. Who cares about proper
rules and conventions, as long as the music is enjoyed by
both the performer and the audience, everybody is happy.
That,
my fellow Singaporean friends, may also be the problem of
this film which got nominated for the Grand Jury Prize at
this year’s Sundance Film Festival.
Because
you and I are not familiar with this festival (I can hear
those who have heard of this festival sniggering at my ignorance
already), we may not understand what all the fuss is all about.
In the end, this feature may end up being a two-odd hour concert
video, featuring some really big names in the music industry.
Expect
to see performances by Velvet Underground, David Gray, Primal
Scream, The Scissor Sisters and David Bowie, just to name
a few. And all these segments are so heart-thumping and loud,
it may be a source of enjoyment or irritant, depending on
your mood.
Director
Julien Temple should be credited for her intensive effort
for bringing all the footages together for this documentary.
From the different qualities of the videos, one can tell that
she went all out to collect footages from professional outtakes
to amateur home videos.
There
is also some attempt to structure the documentary to allow
viewers to understand the history and culture of this 30-year-old
music festival. From the opening segment talking about the
religiousness of the lands where the festival is held, to
the concluding scene where its sacredness and holiness is
brought up again, there are quieter moments for the audience
to appreciate and take a breather.
But the runtime of this film merely makes it feel like a mishmash
mosaic of videos put together to celebrate this festival -
not that this is an entirely bad thing though.
There
are the colourful characters who dress up as birds and horses
to attend the festival; there are the hippies who run around
butt-naked; there are the strange Asian men who blow pipes
which make even stranger sounds; there are the crazy dudes
who roll in mud in ecstasy. The list can go on forever.
But
a personal favourite is the three-man father and sons team
who clean up the excrement from the portable toilets every
morning. Their outlook in life is something worth cheering
for.
A
simple line “If it pays, why not?” says it all.
And
yes, this free-spirited attitude is what the documentary,
and perhaps, Glastonbury Festival is all about.
But
when you walk out of the theatre into the bustling surroundings
you are so used to, you cannot help but sadly feel that the
harsh and practical realities are all lined up again, waiting
for you.
Movie
Rating:
(A colourful montage of footages featuring rapturous performers
and happy people, this documentary will make please fans of
British music)
Review
by John Li
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