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Subject: "this james brown doc is gonna be great! " Previous topic | Next topic
fire
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Mon Oct-27-14 01:18 PM

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"this james brown doc is gonna be great! "


          

http://www.avclub.com/review/hbos-james-brown-doc-mr-dynamite-works-hard-its-su-210818

By Joshua Alston Oct 27, 2014 12:00 AM
A-
Mr. Dynamite: The Rise Of James Brown
Director: Alex Gibney
Runtime: 120 minutes
Rating: TV-14
Cast: Mick Jagger, Bobby Byrd, Clyde Stubblefield
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James Brown’s legacy as a soul virtuoso is unchallenged, but there’s an equally fervent consensus about his tyranny. It’s a duality so common as to be cliché—the relentlessness fueling an artist’s output wreaks havoc on every other facet of his life—but that familiarity doesn’t make a life as singular, as complicated, and as messy as Brown’s any easier to distill into a screen narrative. In fact, to tell Brown’s life story without leaning too far toward hagiography or censure requires a level of discipline on par with Brown’s—no easy feat when objective descriptions of his ceaseless touring schedule sound as hyperbolic as campfire legends.

Alex Gibney’s Mr. Dynamite: The Rise Of James Brown is an assured threading-of-the-needle, slowly working its way to the sweet spot where the man and the legend overlap. Gibney is the ideal director for a Brown documentary, with a resume including his journey into a luminary’s heart of darkness in 2013’s The Armstrong Lie as well as this year’s Finding Fela, Gibney’s portrait of Afrobeat visionary Fela Kuti, whose loving interpretation of Brown’s stage shows fostered mutual admiration and as well as a habit of both artists openly cribbing from each other.

With the blessing of Brown’s estate, Gibney was granted unprecedented access to archival performance and interview footage, and Mr. Dynamite wears that access proudly, with Gibney jamming as much performance into the film as it can hold. From its opening frames, Mr. Dynamite lets Brown make the case for himself with his plaintive vocals and rubber-limbed juking. The stage footage is the star of the show, and for good reason, as to watch the blistering performances that earned Brown his “Hardest Working Man In Show Business” moniker is to think the superlative is too faint praise.

Gibney’s emphasis on the archival footage—some of which has never been aired—leaves less time for talking-head psychoanalysis, but there’s also plenty of that, with sharp insights from such key Brown bandmates as drummer Clyde Stubblefield, saxophonist Maceo Parker, and Danny Ray, the funk acolyte whose stage responsibility was to toss a cape over a possum-playing Brown before he roared back to life. The contextual commentary from interviewees including culture critic Greg Tate and jazz bassist Christian McBride are often just as welcome, helping to create a portrait that doesn’t ignore, but is not primarily interested in the dirt under Brown’s fingernails.

Brown’s ruthlessness as a bandleader is well-documented, and his bandmates do in Mr. Dynamite what they’ve always done: revering Brown’s prodigious musical talents and the ingenuity of his performance concepts while bemoaning his bullying. Brown reprimanded players on stage and was obsessed with immaculate presentation, often withholding a band member’s nightly wage if he was careless enough to show up without perfectly creased pants.

Brown’s fee disputes with his band, which led to more than one mass exodus, goes to one of Mr. Dynamite’s central themes—the degree to which Brown’s perfectionist streak imperiled the same success it fostered. Brown was a tyrant, to be sure, but his underlying crime was impatience, his inability to accept that his band members couldn’t always keep up with him during a period in which it wasn’t uncommon for them to play a half-dozen two-hour sets in a single day. He proudly wore his Hardest Working Man In Show Business nickname, yet couldn’t accept that to be the best was to be unmatched, even by those he relied upon to execute his vision. But those tales, while ethically unsavory, still burnish Brown’s image as a funk god, with the possible exception of the time drummer Melvin Parker was forced to pull a gun on him.

That isn’t to say Brown escapes Mr. Dynamite unscathed. The film maintains its tight focus on Brown’s golden era in the back half of the 1960s, flicking only briefly at his remarkably difficult childhood in a series of title cards, for example. But Gibney doesn’t attempt to elide Brown’s shortcomings. Rev. Al Sharpton lends a startling view into Brown’s inner turmoil, addressing Brown’s history of violence against women via Brown’s remarks after Sharpton witnessed the tail end of one of his domestic-violence incidents. “He said, ‘Reverend, don’t ever hit a woman,’” Sharpton says. “He said, ‘Don’t be like me. I come from generations of that. It’s wrong.’”

Where Mr. Dynamite falters is when it most resembles Get On Up, Tate Taylor’s limp noodle of a Brown biopic. Much like the Hollywood version, Mr. Dynamite occasionally gets bogged down in simplistic Freudian psychoanalysis, using Brown’s maternal abandonment as a unifying theory to explain any and every one of his idiosyncrasies. The use of the departure of Brown’s mother as a lens introduces a subtly sexist tone, implying that her betrayal is responsible for all of Brown’s worst qualities and none of his best, whereas absentee-father narratives tend to credit irresponsible men for forcing their children to embrace self-reliance.

Of course, Mr. Dynamite has an advantage Get On Up doesn’t: Brown himself. Chadwick Boseman delivered an admirable performance, but it naturally withers in comparison to the genuine article. Mick Jagger, who also serves as producer, testifies to this, recalling the time he conned Brown into performing on an episode of The Ed Sullivan Show on which Brown preceded The Rolling Stones. There are few fates worse than having to follow the Godfather Of Soul.

________________________________________
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this james brown doc is gonna be great! [View all] , fire, Mon Oct-27-14 01:18 PM
 
Subject Author Message Date ID
Thx for the Reminder
Oct 27th 2014
1
RE: Thx for the Reminder
Nov 02nd 2014
50
Lemme go head and set the DVR now. Nm
Oct 27th 2014
2
An hour in, and this is insane
Oct 27th 2014
3
The mustache period.... lol
Oct 27th 2014
4
the eyebrow pencil methods used by j.b. are horrifying
Nov 02nd 2014
51
yeah....great documentary..
Oct 27th 2014
5
'twas on the 1!
Oct 27th 2014
6
Where to begin...
Oct 27th 2014
7
Can't wait to see this.
Oct 27th 2014
8
I've just grown tired of biopics.
Oct 28th 2014
22
the fact that clyde stubblefield HATES funky drummer is absolutely
Nov 02nd 2014
52
Very enjoyable, though it also felt very incomplete.
Oct 28th 2014
9
it was called the RISE of James Brown...
Oct 28th 2014
13
Like I said: It didn't end, it stopped.
Oct 28th 2014
14
      RE: Like I said: It didn't end, it stopped.
Oct 28th 2014
15
      Chill. I'm POASTIN.
Oct 28th 2014
18
           I thought about that post last night while watching the doc
Oct 28th 2014
20
      made a post about what?
Oct 28th 2014
16
      Learn how asterisked footnotes work,
Oct 28th 2014
17
           oh that post...lol....
Oct 28th 2014
19
                As usual, the truth is never a part of your agenda.
Oct 28th 2014
21
                     before you go on....
Oct 28th 2014
23
                          I already did show you.
Oct 28th 2014
24
                               nope.... again..you made an accusation...back it up..or bail out
Oct 28th 2014
25
                                    At times I wonder why I degrade myself by entertaining you.
Oct 28th 2014
26
                                         you're not the only one who wonders about that.
Oct 28th 2014
30
                                         I admit: It's a compulsion.
Oct 28th 2014
31
                                         exactly....
Oct 28th 2014
32
                                              RE: exactly....
Oct 30th 2014
37
                                                   The funny thing though
Oct 30th 2014
38
                                                   RE: The funny thing though
Oct 30th 2014
39
                                                   James Brown's view of the Vietnam ware is consistent
Oct 30th 2014
43
                                                   dude...
Oct 30th 2014
42
                                                   I think there was a "generational" element about his support
Oct 30th 2014
41
      RE: Like I said: It didn't end, it stopped.
Oct 28th 2014
27
      there was a 3 hour version
Oct 31st 2014
46
           cool...a Director's cut would be awesome...
Oct 31st 2014
48
           RE: cool...a Director's cut would be awesome...
Nov 02nd 2014
53
           whew lawd....4 hours?!
Nov 02nd 2014
54
           Yeah, I'd watch a whole series with all this stuff
Nov 03rd 2014
59
how'd I know you two would be going at it in here
Oct 31st 2014
44
      ^^^^
Oct 31st 2014
47
      my beautiful post
Nov 02nd 2014
55
Where? When?
Oct 28th 2014
10
HBO last night.
Oct 28th 2014
11
      I'll check for it
Oct 28th 2014
12
wonder what alex gibney's next docu will be...
Oct 28th 2014
28
Did you cop George's autobio?
Oct 28th 2014
29
      nope...
Oct 29th 2014
34
           quite.
Oct 29th 2014
35
                book or movie?
Nov 02nd 2014
56
                     RE: book or movie?
Nov 02nd 2014
57
this was pretty awesome nm
Oct 29th 2014
33
well damn...
Oct 30th 2014
36
there's some concert footage in this
Oct 30th 2014
40
I enjoyed it a lot. I think it's a great starting point for younger fans
Oct 31st 2014
45
Great doc. The best music doc I've seen.
Nov 01st 2014
49
Forgot all about this. Will watch it tonight for sure
Nov 03rd 2014
58

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