From the comic masterminds behind the noted
mockumentaries "This Is Spinal Tap", "Waiting For Guffman" and "Best In Show" comes a
similarly hilarious effort. "A Mighty Wind" is tuned just right for a droll
satire of the folk music scene. It playfully mocks the pretensions of these
dated political message-carriers and the world they epitomize. It chronicles
three famous groups from the past as they prepare for a show at New York City’s
famed Town Hall to memorialize Irving Steinbloom, a recently deceased concert
promoter. His control-freak son Jonathan Steinbloom has inherited the empire of
the founder of the Folktown label, and wishes to honor his father with a
concert featuring his favorites. The wormy personality of Jonathan might have
been shaped from childhood, when his overbearing Jewish mother made him wear a
polo helmet while playing chess.
The first group featured is the passionate 1960s
folk trio called “The Folksmen” (Guest, McKean, Shearer), a group that is
making their comeback after losing favor with the public while still clinging
to their almost popular song "Old
Joe's Place." Guest
is the loopy banjo player. McKean is the aging matinee idol pretty boy and
guitar player, whose voice blends into the middle range of the other two.
Shearer is Amish-bearded and bald and plays the bass, and will learn before the
film ends that he really feels more comfortable as a woman.
Another act is the upbeat commercial “New Main
Street Singers,” a spunky group of nine-members wearing uniforms of sweater
vests and unabashedly promoting their spotless family value image. Behind the
scenes there’s a
fling at pornography, street life, and quack cultish beliefs. The
group’s leaders are a zany couple, John Michael Higgins and Jane Lynch. Jane
is the mother figure who made it from pornos to the Florida-based feel-good
group and Higgins is an energetic believer in some weird cultish color theory
about the power of its vibrations, which he attributes to helping him find
success. The group is despised by the Folksmen for lacking the folk spirit of
the serious musicians.
The funniest and most touching group is "Mickey
and Mitch," a popular former coffeehouse folk duo. They were lovers who split up
and are out of showbiz, and fight back their emotional pain to talk about their
past relationship and as professionals rehearse for the show without giving in
to their pain. The grey-haired Eugene Levy plays the burned out folk singer
with a tender intensity. He has just been released from a mental institution
and seems disoriented and speaks with obvious difficulty in a halting way and
perpetuates a blank stare. His sanity is still questionable.
The once hip Catherine O’Hara is now a square married to a salesman of medical equipment specializing in catheters for “bladder-control,” whose hobby is model trains. Mitch is invited over to his former partner’s suburban house, to see if they can manage to get together for one more performance after 28 years of not speaking. The men reluctantly bond and take leave to the hobby room. They peer down intently on the model-train setup, as Mitch’s succinct comment is that he would have liked to see the display in autumn instead of winter. On stage the duo will sing their historic signature song “A Kiss at the End of the Rainbow,” which calls for a heartfelt kiss that originally sent shivers through the folk scene community. Though it all might seem ridiculous, the romance between the two is credible and even moving despite all the comedy emanating from the has-been singing star.
Director Christopher Guest’s writing
collaborator is the gifted Eugene Levy. They selectively chose the folk scene
they wanted, as their spoof left out all the protest and political music of
that era and a wide variety of other folk singers from bluegrass to Nashville.
The only hint of politics is when the Folksmen are asked to stall during the
concert and talk about the Spanish civil war.
But before we get to the main feature, let's enjoy...
The Pre-Show:
In our "Film Extras" section we will enjoy our now, not so rare, "double feature" prediction, as we've had the opportunity of enjoying in other occasions. This time, a magnificent documentary which explores the music scene in Greenwich Village, New York in the 60s and early 70s. The film highlights some of the finest singer/songwriters of the day. Interviews with Pete Seeger, Kris Kristofferson, Judy Collins, Arlo Guthrie and others show how the music coming out of New York's Greenwich Village challenged the status quo and promoted social change during the 1960s and 70s.
Concerning our "TV On Deck" section, we continue with our 60s-70s comedy sitcoms and our cartoon delight. Plus our "newbie" and his continued adventures in Las Vegas, or is it "Algeria"?
The Main Feature:
Title: A Mighty Wind
Directors: Christopher Guest
Cast: Bob Balaban / Christopher Guest / John Michael Higgins / Eugene Levy / Jane Lynch / Michael McKean / Catherine O'Hara / Parker Posey / Harry Shearer / Fred Willard
Release Date: April 16, 2003
Country: United States
On Your Way Out:
As our motto goes: "Grab 'em, Use 'em, Enjoy 'em". You all know by now this section is here to hopefully, enhance your experience of viewing today's flick. The pictures, the reading material plus the listening extras, all have one common goal: pleasure through learning!
Cheers.
Shade.
Note: Password for all files: Shade'sVintageRadio
We never do anything well till we cease to think about the manner of doing it. (William Hazlitt)
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