Doctor Strange
I'll Lock Up
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- Hudson Valley, NY
I Saw The Light, the recent Hank Williams biopic with Tom Hiddleston.
It's a mixed bag. Hiddleston is, of course, excellent. The performance sequences are well done, and since the songs are pure gold, they sparkle. The production design and costumes are good - and of course, there are threads in the Hat forum just about the hats.
But where the film really fails for me is in dealing with Williams as a creative artist. Even after he gets a job as a songwriter, we never see him actually writing any songs. There's no attempt to understand his complex personality, beyond boozing and affairs... and that he has a knee-jerk rebellious response to (most) authority while at the same time remaining in thrall to his overbearing mother (Cherry Jones - great). This is shown, but not explored. The film spends far too much time on his contentious relationships with his wives, when it should be a little more about his music.
Two other complaints:
The songs in the film are nearly all his good-time, get-people-dancing tunes (Move On Over, Hey Good Lookin, Honky Tonkin'), with only a couple of the heavier - and more deeply felt, philosophical, melancholy - ones showing up towards the end. Another way in which his brilliant creativity isn't well served.
And the film follows the standard musical biopic template far too closely: unrecognized talent, struggle, success, addiction, rehab, affairs, conflicts, self-destruction, failing health, too-early death. While it's certainly true that Williams' life is a classic example of this arc, it's really hard for me to take most of these threadbare tropes seriously after their hilariously brilliant deconstruction in Walk Hard: The Dewey Cox Story!
It's a mixed bag. Hiddleston is, of course, excellent. The performance sequences are well done, and since the songs are pure gold, they sparkle. The production design and costumes are good - and of course, there are threads in the Hat forum just about the hats.
But where the film really fails for me is in dealing with Williams as a creative artist. Even after he gets a job as a songwriter, we never see him actually writing any songs. There's no attempt to understand his complex personality, beyond boozing and affairs... and that he has a knee-jerk rebellious response to (most) authority while at the same time remaining in thrall to his overbearing mother (Cherry Jones - great). This is shown, but not explored. The film spends far too much time on his contentious relationships with his wives, when it should be a little more about his music.
Two other complaints:
The songs in the film are nearly all his good-time, get-people-dancing tunes (Move On Over, Hey Good Lookin, Honky Tonkin'), with only a couple of the heavier - and more deeply felt, philosophical, melancholy - ones showing up towards the end. Another way in which his brilliant creativity isn't well served.
And the film follows the standard musical biopic template far too closely: unrecognized talent, struggle, success, addiction, rehab, affairs, conflicts, self-destruction, failing health, too-early death. While it's certainly true that Williams' life is a classic example of this arc, it's really hard for me to take most of these threadbare tropes seriously after their hilariously brilliant deconstruction in Walk Hard: The Dewey Cox Story!