A Film Review of A Prairie Home Companion and Leonard Cohen: I’m Your Man
Two Movies—Close Your Eyes and Listen
Film-wise, summer usually means big-budget action films, the
latest cutting-edge animated feature, or over-the-top comedies. Summer 2006
provided a huge fare (some even entertaining) of these genres: X-Men: The
Last Stand,
A Prairie Home Companion is probably familiar to “Companion”
readers. Similar to the radio show, which has been on the air since 1974 (or as
Guy Noir says, “…since Jesus was in the 3rd grade.”), this fictional
movie is not about anything in particular really. Less about plot (the viewer
is supposedly getting a behind-the-scenes look at the final radio broadcast of
the show due to the sale of the Fitzgerald Theater to a cold-hearted corporate
hack), the film is more about moments, songs, conversations, and characters. And
the characters are priceless as they embody the joys, pains, insights and
misunderstandings of life. Whether they be portrayed by actors (Meryl Streep—the
stand-out of the group, Lily Tomlin, Kevin Kline, John C. Reilly, Woody
Harrelson, Virginia Madsen, Tommy Lee Jones, Maya Rudolph or Lindsay Lohan) or by
regulars from the radio show such as Tom Keith, Sue Scott, Tim Russell, and of
course Garrison Keillor, octogenarian director Robert Altman allows the viewer
a meandering view of human eccentricity (Keillor’s forte also). This film is
the most recent of the director’s many ensemble films focusing on the arts. His
earlier films include Company (dance), Kansas City (jazz), Ready-to-Wear (fashion), The Player (film), Vincent and Theo (painting), and Nashville (country music).
The film Leonard Cohen: I’m Your Man is a visual and musical memoir of
the legendary singer-songwriter of the 60’s and 70’s, Leonard Cohen, and the
current artists he has influenced. This documentary, while centering on the “Come
So Far for Beauty” concert at the Sydney Opera House in 2005 in honor of Cohen,
also includes intimate interviews with this Canadian beat poet who put much of
his work to music, and with the artists who draw inspiration from him. Artists
include: Nick Cave, Beth Orton, Rufus Wainwright, Martha Wainwright, Anthony
Hegarty, Perla Batalla, Julie Christensen, Anna and Kate McGarrigle, Jarvis
Cocker and U2. While learning about this man’s formation as a person and artist,
the viewer/listener is given the opportunity to specifically attend to Cohen’s
spiritual roots and influences: his Jewish upbringing, his Christian
sensitivities, and his Buddhist practices. His songs poignantly suggest the
spiritual yearning of a man seeking the Divine’s presence in the world (and in
his life). Likewise, in and through his songs we hear something of the state of
the nation and world, then, and now--many of the songs having a second life in
today’s context. Lian Lunson, a musician herself (composing music for The
Passion of the Christ), directed the film with the support of Gibson’s Icon Productions.
While these two films represent different film
genres--fiction and documentary, and different music genres—Americana folk and
gospel, and 60’s beat music, they share many similarities. Besides both being
105 minutes long and rated PG-13, the power of both lies in the central
characters—Keillor and Cohen—and—the music. Keillor and Cohen seem larger than
life at times. While some have
called Cohen, the “poet laureate of pessimism” Keillor is not far behind with
his description of Minnesotan Norwegians as “a dark people who believe it could
be worse, and are waiting for it.” Yet both are loved for their wry sense of humor, thirst for
beauty and spiritual quest. But even larger than these two men, it is the
hauntingly beautiful music in each which makes the films powerful. In Prairie
Home Companion and Leonard
Cohen the
filmmakers give us recorded-live music, with little or no editing
after-the-fact. Both have a refreshingly raw beauty and spontaneity. Likewise,
both films seem to want to be a testament to the celebration of imperfection and
longevity. The films are a far cry from MTV fare that showcases the latest
young new artist. No, these films are about artists and their music--a music
that has lasted the test of time, capturing the longing of the human soul.
While we have occasionally listened to Keillor’s radio show
over the years, and have a couple of Cohen’s CD’s, we certainly aren’t
aficionados of either, as some of are older or younger friends are. But it didn’t matter. As we slipped
into the music of each of the films, we knew there was something more to these
movies. Neither are perfect movies, nor even great movies, but both are wonderful
just the same. Perhaps Prairie Home Companion and Leonard Cohen fans should go
together to the movies, and share each other’s music…and maybe an odd couple
can bring us closer together.
August 2006
Catherine M. Barsotti
Robert K. Johnston