The first was the feature film +Nowhere Boy, directed by Sam Taylor-Wood. The best thing I can say about this film is that Aaron Johnson looked, in long shots, like the young John, especially when he had his Buddy Holly-like glasses on. The most effective scenes were those when John and Paul first meet and the Quarrymen play their first gigs. On the other hand, the scenes with Ann-Marie Duff (estranged mother Julia) were exaggerated (her acting, their relationship with each other). Yes, Julia was young when she had John, but I've read many many books on the Beatles and didn't expect to see her attraction to and love for him so over-the-top flirtatious, nearly incestuous. John grieved deeply and always after her sudden death, but it wasn't because of any sexual attraction; it was because he was just starting to know her after years of absence.
Christopher Eccleston in Lennon Naked had the accent down, but is too old to be portraying John Lennon in the the mid-60's through early 70's. That alone was distracting, but more than that, again we had stereotypical Lennon anecdotes, including
- his cruelty to others (Cynthia, childhood friends, Brian Epstein)
- his possible sexual liaison with Brian Epstein (the beginning of the film concentrates on this)
- his childishness/failure to "grow up" (jumping into pool with clothes on, bed-in being mocked by the press)
- his insensitivity to the other Beatles when breaking up the band (at least they showed Paul jumping the gun by announcing he was quitting before Lennon could get the word out)
Fortunately, Lennon NYC on PBS Monday night redeemed John's portrait. Of course, it was a documentary, so we saw what was. Documentaries can also distort, but this one did not. John didn't come off looking like a saint -- his excessive drinking and boorish behavior during his famous "Lost Weekend" was honestly depicted, as was his neglect of Julian. But we saw his outspokenness against the Vietnam War and Nixon's efforts to have him deported for this; his love for NYC/America; his great love for Yoko and Sean. And, of course, his huge talent in action. It was fascinating to see how the melodies came and lyrics were revised as the songs evolved. This is the John Lennon we should remember.
I watched and enjoyed that same Lennon NYC. Also been listening to a lot of the Lennon outtakes post-Beatles output, everything from Imagine extras (How Do Ya Sleep, Ya C**t?) to casette demos from the last year. He was a very busy man and a bit if a bastard in the studio when you listen to his diva-ness emerge through very demanding requests (not that he didn't deserve attention and know what he wanted, but sometimes he was just bloody rude). A lot of interminable versions posted nearly this month isn the wake of the 40th anniversary ...I must have downloaded15 CDs worth, probably with some duplication...some really cool stuff here and there...like Lennon in a hotel room in Syracuse in 1971 or so multiple versions (some very raw lyrically of pre-cordined version of 'Give Peace A Chance'
ReplyDeleteI think a lot of people will remember the 'sanitized' version of Lennon because that's only as far as they will dig'