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Thread: Lian Lunson: Leonard Cohen: I'm Your Man (2005)

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    Lian Lunson: Leonard Cohen: I'm Your Man (2005)

    Tantalizing hodgepodge not quite worthy of a remarkable men

    Leonard Cohen is a songwriters’ songwriter, like Townes van Zandt, about whom
    a documentary film appeared last year. The subject of this new one, produced by Lion’s Gate Television and now in limited US release in theaters – is famous here and in Europe and an icon in Canada and still vital today, in his early seventies, after a very long career -- though younger mainstream pop fans may be unfamiliar with his name. A Jew from Montreal, the son of a successful haberdasher who died when he was nine but left him money to live on, Cohen means a lot to people who write songs or who’ve cared about lyrics from the Sixties when John Hammond discovered him and the Seventies when Robert Altman used his songs in McCabe and Mrs. Miller and on into the present day, when he has returned to perform after an absence of over a decade, partly due to financial need. But you won’t get all this information from this documentary. Nor will this be the ideal introduction to the man and his work.

    The film cuts into music with talking heads in the manner of such films and is mainly an editing together of a concert honoring Cohen featuring Nick Cave, Rufus Wainwright, Beth Orton, Jarvis Cocker, and others with a long interview of Cohen at his home in L.A. interspersed with old footage of the man’s life. Some overly pointed tricks with stills and overlays of red blobs are a distracting element in what otherwise is technically unimpressive filmmaking. The impression that emerges is that Cohen interviewed intercut with texts of his poems and himself singing would make a fine and intelligent film. Concerts by admirers would be another, lesser, film. Combining the two elements diminishes both and results in a film that seems slapped together.

    At the end as a kind of surprise Cohen himself sings a song backed up by Bono and the Edge, who’ve sung his praises in words earlier. However this performance is unremarkable and not a climactic finale.

    Cohen in his interview amid many wise and pithy remarks provides us with a tantalizingly sketchy narrative of waht sounds like a fascinating life: we find out that he grew up in Montreal and was active with a group of poets there; has lived on the island of Hydra and in the Chelsea Hotel and made love to Janis Joplin and wrote a song about her; has a reputation as a ladies man but has spent “ten thousand nights alone”; has been ordained as a Zen monk and lived in a monastery on Mount Baldy; learned early the virtues of modesty and despair and the acceptance of failure as inevitable. We would like to learn more.

    Respect is clearly due a writer-musician of such originality and intelligence, but apart from the uneasy linkage of interview and songs, the concert clips covered in this film might have been better if the performances had been more straightforward and less worshipful. The songs are made into anthems and the most essential element, the words, gets muddled. I’m pleased to be introduced to Rufus Wainwright, whose voice and personality are irresistible, and who’s a Montrealer too. Nick Cave, whom some see as a kind of heir to Cohen as a complex lyricist, isn’t half bad either, in a second-tier cabaret singer sort of way, at rendering Cohen's songs; his performance of Cohen's most famous song, "Susanne,"which even I immediately recognized, is not unworthy. And this is one place where the interview and the concert come together effectively, since Cohen comments on the song's actual origins just before the performance is shown.

    There ought to have been more of the flat tuneless singing of Leonard Cohen himself, which is probably the best way to experience his lyrics, without too much musical embroidery. Is it that unlike Townes Van Zandt's, Cohen’s Sixties and Seventies performances are unfilmed? The other speakers about the man are as worshipful as the concertizers. They go so overboard in praising him that they could be talking about Socrates or Jesus. Bono is an eloquent speaker, but not a precise one.

    This overblown praise is curiously inappropriate for someone as modest and ironic as Cohen -- and so well able to speak for himself. When songwriters are also poets or wits, like Bob Dylan or Tom Lehrer or Cohen, they don't need tuneful voices but what they do need is clarity of diction -- which they have, and the men in the tribute concert, Jarvis Cocker, Nick Cave, Wainwright, have, but the women performers, including Wainwright's own sister, tend to lack. The ideal audience for this film is one that can approach it already armed with worshipful reverence. If you know noting about Leonard Cohen, the place to start would be not here, but with his own recordings, moving on to the more detailed bios available online and then perhaps (though I haven't been there) to his published writings, which include both poems and novels. Only after acquiring a thorough familiarity with Cohen's writing and singing would one want to hear elaborate covers of his songs

    Some viewers of this film find the performance by "Antony" (Antony Hegarty) of “If It Be Your Will” awesome and deeply moving. That might be true, were it not so awkward, peculiar, maudlin, and embarrassing. Not for the first time, egocentric hamming overpowered the simple power of the song. And ironically, when the performances most excelled musically, they seemed most to lose touch with the Leonard Cohen flavor of the songs.

    The director, Lian Lunson, is a woman from Australia who’s a good friend of Bono and who has done a film about Willie Nelson – and has the dubious honor of having composed the music for The Passion of the Christ. She has said Mel Gibson is a big fan of both Cohen and Nick Cave, and helped her get the film produced by Lion’s Gate.

    Last edited by Chris Knipp; 06-27-2006 at 04:51 PM.

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    Oscar wrote earlier on Johan's pre-release thread on the film:
    I'm afraid the covers of Cohen songs would only make me wish for the unblemished originals.
    You got that right, without even seeing the new film. THere is a wealth of material about Leonard Cohen online, and maybe some people will want to provides some links to sort out the best of it. One place to start would obviously be The Leonard Cohen Files http://leonardcohenfiles.com/
    But actually a lot of it is good. And far more relevant, alas, than the film. This is one of those casew where you just with the man had been allowed to talk, and talk, and talk. But my question remains: are there not films of early performances by Cohen himself?
    Last edited by Chris Knipp; 06-27-2006 at 11:02 AM.

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    Originally posted by Chris Knipp
    I’m pleased to be introduced to Rufus Wainwright, whose voice and personality are irresistible, and who’s a Montrealer too.

    Rufus is the offspring of folk aristocracy. His father is Loudon Wainwright III and his mom is Kate McGarrigle (of Kate & Anna McGarrigle). To say his talent pales in comparison to that of his genius parents is no put-down. Rufus' first album actually gave me hope he would eventually release an album as great as the McGarrigles' "Dancer with Bruised Knees", for instance. Subsequent albums reveal him to be an above-average singer/songwriter/showman but resolutely a minor artist. That first album is a keeper though. Check out the AIDS allegory "Barcelona", a gentle dirge for a junkie lover called "Baby", and great songs about River Phoenix and about his mom.

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    Originally posted by Chris Knipp
    my question remains: are there not films of early performances by Cohen himself?

    Very little actually.

    Ladies and Gentlemen...Mr. Leonard Cohen was shot in November of 1964 before he startted to appropriate music to accompany his words. It's about a trip from Greece to his native Montreal to promote his poetry books. It's 45 minute long. The dvd adds four more recent short animated films that use his songs as music score.

    You can see him preforming "Suzanne" in Message to Love: The Isle of Wight Festival, shot in the summer of 1970 but not released until 1995.

    Four unavailable, rarely screened docs:
    Guitare au Poing (1972)
    Bird on a Wire (1974)
    The Song of Leonard Cohen (1980) reportedly horrid audio/video.
    Leonard Cohen: Printemps '96 (1997) interview + day-in-the-life

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    Oscar--

    Your comments emphasize how much information is missing from the documentary, including where the music comes from for his songs. They could at least have cuts from Cohen albums played in the background; but no. As I said I liked Rufus, and was interested to see what Nick Cave sounds and looks like. The other singers, folk aristocrats or whatever, did not impress, and their poor diction, one viewer comments, was due to not knowing the words, and reading them off sheet music even while performing. Unfortunate there is almost no footage of Cohen performing--but would the "unavailable, rarely screened" films be that?

    Is Rufus gay?
    To say his talent pales in comparison to that of his genius parents is no put-down.
    It's not exactly high praise either though is it, eh?

    P.s. Unrelated question: Speaking of gay, have you seen João Pedro Rodrigues' Two Drifters/Odete?

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    Originally posted by Chris Knipp
    The other singers, folk aristocrats or whatever, did not impress, and their poor diction, one viewer comments, was due to not knowing the words, and reading them off sheet music even while performing.

    No folk aristocrats in the line-up; but performing a Cohen song without the words being clearly understood is a total waste. With Cohen, the music is subservient to the lyrics.

    Unfortunate there is almost no footage of Cohen performing--but would the "unavailable, rarely screened" films be that?

    Two of the docs I listed, the ones released in 1974 and 1980, are made up primarily of Cohen performances, reportedly that is.

    Is Rufus gay?

    He's been consistently clear about being gay all along. His parents recognized he was gay when he was very young. Rufus claims he picked up a man at a bar when he was 14 for what he thought would be a romantic walk through London's Hyde Park but he was raped. Rufus remained celibate for 7 years after that. He's been called a "hyper-romantic". Many of his songs have "gay content" (Barcelona, One-Man Guy, Gay Messiah) or "addiction content" (Rufus had a severe addiction to crystal meth in his late 20s until friend Elton John convinced him to go into rehab. He had drug parties with First Daughter Barbara Bush and Marianne Faithfull!).

    Speaking of gay, have you seen João Pedro Rodrigues' Two Drifters/Odete?

    No, will do some research. Have you?

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    Great review, Chris

    The point about Leonard sleeping with Janis contradicts what Janis herself said: My heart's been broken twice. I've been lying next to Jim Morrison- didn't lay a hand on me. I've been lying next to Leonard Cohen- didn't ball me. It does a number on a woman's ego, you know?

    Rufus Wainwright's first LP is definitely a keeper- oscar knows best. My fave song is APRIL FOOLS- I could listen to that one forever. Very Beatles-ish.

    I learned about Rufus through the theatre crowd I used to work with in Edmonton- the theatre tends to attract some homosexuals...


    This film plays later this month at the Bytowne.
    I'll post when I see it.
    "Set the controls for the heart of the Sun" - Pink Floyd

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    Thanks, Johann.

    Leonard Cohen and the film by Lian Lunson:

    The implication in the movie was that something sexual happened between Cohen and Joplin.

    The footage of Cohen performing from 1974 and 1980 and other times has to be found and restored and used, in a more worthy documentary.

    Interesting information about Rufus Wainwright.

    Thought the words aren't clear enough, some of the performances are musically enjoyable; that's they way they're done. It's not that the words are willfully blurred, but for somebody who doesn't know them, they're not enunciated precisely enough. And I'm not the only person to note that.

    João Pedro Rodrigues' Two Drifters/Odete:

    Yes, I just saw it at the Quad Cinema in NYC. It has gotten wildly different reviews (Nathan Lee and David Fear, worshipful; most of the others, dismissive); I didn't know quite what to make of it; I saw virtues in it, but thought it willful and tedious. I'm not sure if I want to write about it. I did not see his 2002 first film, O fantasma (Metacritic, 36). Todd Haynes, Fassbinder, and Douglas Sirk have been mentioned.

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    Two Drifters is only playing at the Quad. But if it expands at all, it will play here. I read your review and I'm leaning towards waiting for the dvd. I also haven't seen O Fantasma but I was surprised at its very low metacritic's score. I'm a fan of Haynes, Fassbinder and Sirk so perhaps I should seek it out.

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    A fan of those might like it more than I.

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    Leonard

    Leonard Cohen is one of my favorite performers and I own all of his recordings. Your review, however, does not encourage me to see this film.
    "They must find it hard, those who have taken authority as truth, rather than truth as authority" Gerald Massey

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    You're right. You can skip it.

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