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So Close Yet So Far: 20 Feet From Stardom

If you love music, particularly almost any type of popular music from the late 1950’s to the mid 1980’s, then put everything down and everything aside on your busy calendar and go see this documentary.  Go if only for the reason you want to listen to some great music and get some additional context.

This film is the story of the backup singer; the crucial supporting vocal or set of vocals to our most popular songs. In some cases they are the voice over behind a popular star who really cannot sing (some will be embarrassing to learn about). 20 Feet From Stardom brings so much to the viewer it is worth 10 times the price of admission.

20 feet brings to you front and center; the people and voices you probably hum along with or sing to way more often than you care to admit. Many of these people are behind the most popular and memorable songs in commercial recording history.

20 Feet tells the story from the eyes of the best backups the recording industry has produced – hands down; Merry Clayton, Claudia Lennear, Darlene Love, and Lisa Fischer.  20 feet tells the story from the eyes of some of the recording industry’s most successful stars; Mick Jagger, Bruce Springsteen and Sting.  20 Feet tells the story from the eyes of some who have successfully navigated the 20 feet; Sheryl Crow, Patti Austin, and Chris Botti. 20 Feet tells the story from the eyes of the producer; Lou Adler and David Lasley.

20 Feet also delves into why the final distance to stardom in not achieved, including personal choice and failure. For many, the film allows you to travel back to an earlier time in your life and experience it with many of the people and sounds directly in front of you.

****** As a Side Note ******

I had the fortune of meeting some of these background singers while taking photos of music groups while on tour in the United States.  All should keep in mind that I was a young, inexperienced and completely unqualified person in his late teens. For example, I met Merry Clayton and Claudia Lennear while shooting five nights of the Rolling Stones Tour of the Americas 1975 for Sunday Magazine and the Evening News Association.  I could be wrong, but they along with Billy Preston had joined the Rolling Stones for this tour to promote the Album; Black and Blue.  Unfortunately backup singers did not get credited on tours until later years.

If I start to get grandiose and or add some revisionist history for my benefit about this period in my life or my photography from it – I watch This Is spinal Tap.  I am quickly humbled – “Hello Cleveland”, “Because its one louder?”

 

Prisoners: Not Your Standard Procedural Police Thriller

 

Prisoners is a taut, methodical and meticulous film.  For its 151 minute run-time (which feels much shorter) you will be challenged with moral dilemmas all the while trying to figure out where things will ultimately end up.  The script, settings, locations, cinematography and musical score could all be described in one word: Ominous.  The acting by the cast can be described in one word as well: Superb.

Hugh Jackman (X-Men, The Prestige, Deception) and his performance as Kelly Dover is nothing short of ferocious.  Dover is all about being prepared for anything and then taking things into your own hands if the result-to-date is not acceptable.  Jake Gyllenhaal (Moonlight Mile, Brokeback Mountain) plays Detective Loki who’s character operates  on the long game theory. Loki simply never gives up; because he knows he will find the answer.  The two actors and roles are a wonderful compliment to each other.

Prisoners operates under the deft hands of Director Denis Villenue (Incendies, Polytechnique and Maelstrom).  Villenue puts on display the power and rage someone feels when the dearest aspect of their life is taken away.  However, what is more powerful is Villenue putting on display three additional aspects even more challenging to convey than an outraged parent. First, is the detective not giving up – without some silly last second clue to move the story to its end quickly.  Second, are family members in total despair who are confronted with moral dilemmas and choices where some would viewed in the eyes of many as actions no better than the those of the criminals.  Third, are the criminals themselves.  Some are victims as well, while others and their motive simply defy logic or reason.

Prisoner’s has the fortune of five others actors who have played leads in recent features.  All of them have strong and important supporting roles.

The real strength of the film is the intricacy and attention to detail provided by Arron Guzikowski’s (Contraband) script.  If you are paying attention and a solid detective in your own right, the answers appear before you.

******Background to read after you have seen the film******

This is a film from a well respected Canadian director and a small and well respected film company (Alcon).  The budget was tiny by Hollywood standards ($40M )  In just two weeks of theatrical release the film has generated $30M in ticket sales.

The Screenplay

Arron Guzikowski wrote refinements to the script at the request of the production team from the supply closet of an ad agency on the East Coast where he worked as a office clerk.  The original script written without a known buyer was completed in 2009.

Location, Location, Location

Locations are tricky and a bad one (e.g., Vancouver BC posing as Seattle or Portland or Toronto ON posing as Washington D.C.) drives me off the deep end.  I offer no apologies. Prisoners is set in Pennsylvania in late November.  If you have lived in Michigan, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Upstate New York or Ontario, Canada you know the look and feel of late November in this region. In Prisoners the feel of the location is perfect to the T.  You might even swear on a book of bibles you have stood on the spot where they filmed a sequence.  And where was it filmed?  Conyers, Georgia, with some footage in nearby Porterdale and Atlanta.  I have visited all three of those places in my life and I got to say they look like Pennsylvania in the late fall, but would never have guess it as the location.

Your Homeland Incinerating Before Your Eyes

Friday August 16th

The clock says it is a few minutes after 3PM in the afternoon. Looking south it is a sunny August day at 6,00 feet elevation on the Valley floor of the Wood River of Idaho in the Northern Rocky Mountains of the United States.  The wind is blowing slightly southwest-to-northeast.  The temperature is 9o degrees Fahrenheit with the humidity pegged at 7 percent.

At the same moment a fireball of flames over a mile wide and and up to 300 feet high consumes the last major ridge line above the valley floor and the Wood River.  The fire waits for no one or thing in it is way. Experts on the subject of wildfires call this a Hot Fire.  Incident Commanders for the United States Forest Service call this beast formally known as the Beaver Creek fire as the Perfect Fire.  Why? Drought, Bark Beetle infestation, warm temperatures, extremely low humidity, wind, old growth forest with nearby grass floors are the finest ingredients available on earth for a hungry fire.  Combined with a lack of manpower and equipment resources to counter the onslaught and voila you have; The Perfect Fire.

Next Stops – The Wood River, Highway 75 and The Lubeck’s.

The Lubeck’s fully evacuate their house by 5PM.  How the house and almost three acres of surrounding property makes out will be what it will be. There are no fears or worries about the material aspects on our part – indicated by how few personal posessions we take with us.  Okay, I will miss my Epson 9900 printer that has been left behind.

The good news is we have our lives and our health.  I also have the great pleasure of sleeping on a single cot in the District Health Offices with Merry [Christmas] Dog and Shae Dog.  Linda says it is quite a sight.

Fire retardant only delays the inevitable; its goin’ to the river.

Somehow the phrase “Better late than never” does not feel soothing to the soul.

A valiant effort, but years of under-funding, lack of resources and ineffective tactics by incident command, leave this pilot over-matched.

Another water drop.

Saturday, August 17th

On this morning the Beaver Creek Fire sits at 92,000 acres – 60,000+ in the last three days alone.  It is hard to predict when and where this one will end. However over the past few days I lost so much of what is more important to me and what I really consider home – The Wood River Valley.