Stardust memories
Velvet Goldmine stirs up the glam past
by Matt Ashare
VELVET GOLDMINE. Directed by Todd Haynes. Written by James Lyons and Todd Haynes. With
Ewan McGregor, Jonathan Rhys Meyers, Toni Collette, Christian Bale, and Eddie
Izzard. A Miramax Films release. At the Avon, Friday and Saturday, January 1
and 2, at midnight.
As the camera enters the Earth's atmosphere and begins its
familiar skydiving fall toward the opening scene of Todd Haynes's glam-rock
drama Velvet Goldmine, there is every reason to believe that it's headed
for Bromley circa January 8, 1947, the place and date of David Bowie's
birth. After all, Bowie was The Man Who Fell To Earth. And along with taking
its name from an obscure Bowie tune, Velvet Goldmine is, on the surface
at least, a film inspired by the rise and fall of Ziggy Stardust and the
Spiders from Mars, the glammiest of all Bowie's many mutations. So it would
make a certain amount of sense for Haynes to begin his story by delivering his
version of Bowie -- a pouty and aloof Jonathan Rhys Meyers in guise of
über rock star Brian Slade -- into post-war London via the stars.
Sense, however, is one thing that holds very little interest for Todd Haynes,
the 37-year-old director whose first full-length feature was the Karen
Carpenter story acted out by Barbie dolls, and whose last film, Poison,
had Julianne Moore developing what amounted an allergic reaction to the 20th
century. He's much more interested in metaphors and surfaces than in depth or
naturalism -- which makes him the perfect filmmaker to attempt the story of
glam, a stylized musical movement that was all about elaborate veneers and
logic-defying fantasies. But Velvet Goldmine is not a
Backbeat-style bio-pic about the Ziggy years, or even a surreal
fairy-tale interpolation à la Alex Cox's Sid and Nancy. No,
Haynes has something much more ambitious and ambiguous in mind -- "Velvet
Goldmine is a valentine to the sounds and images that erupted in and around
London in the early '70s," is how he put it in his mouthful of a Director's
Statement, "to Bryan Ferry, David Bowie, Iggy Pop, Lou Reed, and the
extraordinary inversions they imposed on our notions of performance, sexuality,
and identity."
And so Velvet Goldmine's initial touchdown takes place not in Bromley,
London, or even England proper, but in Dublin; not in 1947, the 1970s, or even
the 20th century, but in 1854. The purpose: to check in on the childhood of one
Oscar Wilde, who informs his teacher and classmates quite seriously, not to
mention anachronistically, that he intends to be a "pop idol" when he grows up,
something Bowie himself is reported to have said upon graduating from high
school. We're also treated to the fanciful sight of a green amulet falling from
the heavens and into the young Wilde's possession.
With the not-so-subtle hint that David Bowie may be a time-traveling Oscar
Wilde carefully planted and the sense that we've embarked on a sci-fi detective
story of sorts suggested, Velvet Goldmine jumps forward a century and
turns into postmodern Citizen Kane -- Kane as a dressed-up
musical period piece driven by a bogus mystery and an investigation destined to
lead nowhere slow. Brian Slade, who, give or take some eyeshadow, is Bowie,
serves as this film's Charles Foster Kane; the green amulet, which finds its
way into Slade's hands, is the "Rosebud" MacGuffin; and Arthur Stuart (played
by Christian Bale) is the reporter digging through a murky past to uncover the
truth about Slade.
Cinemaphiles will have no trouble spotting Haynes's overt Kane mutinies
-- the office scene where Stuart reluctantly accepts the Slade assignment; the
dark bar where Stuart interviews the tired and damaged former Mrs. Brian Slade
(played by Toni Collette, who affects a wonderful fake English accent) -- or
his visual nods to the hyper-real worlds of Kubrick's A Clockwork Orange
and 2001: A Space Odyssey. And rock-trivia buffs will be just as
tickled by the care with which Haynes gets Ziggy with the film. It's a treasure
trove of obscure references, composite characters, and historical parallels.
There's Curt Wild (a grungy Ewan McGregor), the detached Slade's
all-too-passionate American foil -- whose band, the Rats, are named after
Spiders from Mars guitarist Mick Ronson's first outfit; whose biography is a
loose blend of Lou Reed and Iggy Pop lore; and who looks at one point so much
like Kurt Cobain it's eerie. There's Slade's faked on-stage death, which puts a
rather literal spin on Bowie's retirement of his Ziggy persona.
Indeed, Haynes mounts a barrage of pop culture so carefully orchestrated that
it may be a while before you realize that nothing is really happening in
Velvet Goldmine in regard to traditional narrative. Like glam rock
itself, which always looks profound from a distance but has rarely placed much
value on depth, the film doesn't bother with heavy character or plot
development. You're supposed to know the story before it even begins, and to
fill in the missing information on your own. Everyone here, from Rhys Meyers to
a delightfully devious Eddie Izzard (who plays Slade's manager Jerry Divine, a
character modeled, of course, on Bowie's Ziggy-era manager, Tony Defries) is a
rock archetype with a predetermined role in the rise-and-fall myth of the
postmodern pop idol.
All of which makes Velvet Goldmine more compelling as rock criticism
than as entertaining cinema. (Roger Ebert's pat verdict on the similarly
impressionistic 1970 film Performance -- "The move is neither very good
nor very bad. Interesting." -- comes to mind.) Rock critics look for meaning,
relevance, and cultural connections in stories that have already been told, in
albums, concerts, and careers. Haynes does the same with glam rock, a giant
blip on the radar of the early '70s that exploded conventional notions of
gender and identity and burned itself out. Velvet Goldmine is a
meditation on that event and its ties to the past (i.e., Oscar Wilde). And it's
an argument in favor of music that reaches recklessly for the stars, of
theater, of androgyny, of spiders from Mars.
Of equal importance to Haynes's argument is the film's soundtrack (on London),
a fine collection of glam-period covers (T-Rex's "20th Century Boy" by Placebo
and the New York Dolls' "Personality Crisis" by Teenage Fanclub with Donna
Matthews), genuine artifacts (Lou Reed's "Satellite of Love" and Roxy Music's
"Virginia Plain"), and new glam facsimiles (Bowie-esque new tunes like Shudder
To Think's "Hot One" and Grant Lee Buffalo's "The Whole Shebang"). By bringing
together a wide array of contemporary artists, including Sonic Youth's Thurston
Moore and Steve Shelley (who back Mudhoney singer Mark Arm on a furious version
of the Stooges' "T.V. Eye") and Radiohead frontman Thom Yorke (who sings the
Bryan Ferry tune "Bitter-Sweet"), the disc suggests that perhaps the time is
right for glam to rear its glittering head in the 20th century -- that perhaps,
just as Singles, the film and the soundtrack, helped launch the grunge
era in the early '90s, Velvet Goldmine could be at the center of a glam
zeitgeist.
Mining the Velvet