Factory outlet
The band plays on in 24 Hour Party People
BY PETER KEOUGH
24 Hour Party People. Directed by Michael Winterbottom. Written by Frank Cottrell Boyce. With Steve
Coogan, Chris Coghill, Paddy Considine, Danny Cunningham, Sean Harris, Shirley
Henderson, Lennie James, Ralf Little, Paul Popplewell, Andy Serkis, and John
Simm. A United Artists release (113 minutes). At the Avon.
Few people could take partying as seriously as Tony Wilson and live to tell
about it. Partying was a religion, even politics. It was the anarchic
alternative to and subversion of the deadening existence of economically
depressed Manchester, England. Wilson saw this truth after witnessing with 41
others a "historic" performance by the Sex Pistols on June 4, 1976. His
benighted city, he believed, would become the modern equivalent of Renaissance
Florence. And to usher in that golden age, he spent the next 16 years as the
musical entrepreneur responsible, among other endeavors, for Factory Records,
the collectivist home of such bands as Joy Division, New Order, and Happy
Mondays. He also founded the Hacienda, Britain's answer to Studio 54, and
helped make "Madchester" synonymous with cutting-edge rock, revolutionary
hedonism, Ecstasy-laced raves, kamikaze finances, and self-destructive
megalomania.
As Wilson himself might put it, this scene is a "historic" saga and a challenge
to any filmmaker -- not just because of its scope and complexity but because
most of those involved were psychotic, suicidal, drug-addicted, unreliable, and
possessed by genius and are now dead. Michael Winterbottom, whose repertoire
(Jude, Welcome to Sarajevo, Wonderland, The Claim)
has been as uneven as it has been ambitious, meets the challenge with a sloppy,
sardonic integrity and an exhausting whimsy. He and screenwriter Frank Cottrell
Boyce embrace the limitations and absurdities of their project, achieving a
Behind the Music as dreamed up by Monty Python -- besotted, hilarious,
incoherent, solipsistic, and deeply sad.
In short, they reduce the story to the rambling and unreliable memoirs of
Wilson himself, who as depicted by British comic Steve Coogan fittingly
resembles Eric Idle -- crossed perhaps with George Sanders. The Pythonesque
qualities come through especially when Wilson is performing his day job as a
broadcaster for Granada TV. There, on his show So It Goes, he engages in
such stunts as hang-gliding and interviewing midget circus attendants when he
isn't giving air time to bands like the Clash -- all the while complaining that
he's a Cambridge graduate and an important journalist who should be covering
this important period in human history. That's when he decides that maybe he
should be making history himself.
Coogan's Wilson makes a funny if suffocating host to his own life, a hip David
Frost bringing to his account, as he points out himself in his condescending
commentary, postmodernist irony and self-reflexivity. Direct address to the
camera is his standard technique, and he chides us if we do not catch his
references to Icarus or semiotics. But he also acknowledges his lapses,
allowing the personages depicted screen time to give their version of events,
and apologizing when the narrative leaves out such details as his second
marriage and his child. The purpose of this Brechtian overkill, he insists, is
to make a film not about his life but about "the music."
In fact, the music is mostly background to Wilson's megalomania and
Winterbottom's stylistic pratfalls. The bands get a little lost in Wilson's
enjoyment of them and Winterbottom's attempt to evoke their spirit.
Winterbottom does capture the gestation of Joy Division, perhaps the greatest
of the Factory bands, as the mad studio genius Martin Hannet (Andy Serkis)
guides them in their layered recording of such incantatory anthems as "She's
Lost Control." And the splashy montage of the degenerate tour-bus antics of
Happy Mondays (whose song provides the film's title) proves a corrective to the
rose-colored reveries of Almost Famous.
On the other hand, Wilson is literally not at home when Joy Division's lead
singer and songwriter, 23-year-old Ian Curtis (Sean Harris), hangs himself.
(Winterbottom has Curtis's feet dangling before a TV screen showing the suicide
scene in Werner Herzog's Stroczek, as if the circumstances of Curtis's
own death were not sufficiently cinematic.) At moments like this, it seems
the film might have been focused on the wrong party person. Say what you
will, however, Wilson had the philosophy needed to survive (he still works for
Granada TV) long enough to write his own history. Among his many pedantic
asides are references to William Blake's road of excess, which leads to the
palace of wisdom and Boethius's wheel of fortune, whose essence is
inconsistency. Winterbottom's film remains true to these two ideals: excessive
and inconsistent, it attains a kind of wisdom.
Issue Date: September 13 - 19, 2002
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