Celluloid Heroes
Revisiting Live at Pompeii - PART ONE
A four part analysis by Paul Powell Jr, with help and suggestions from Adrian Maben.
With
the Pink Floyd Live at Pompeii film due to be released on DVD this
October, we are seizing the opportunity to take a much closer look at
this enigmatic documentary. Over the next four monthly installments,
beginning now, I'm going to explore the full range of the film's many
cinematic facets, culminating with a comprehensive review of the DVD
soon after release. I think to best understand the total dynamic of
Live at Pompeii's intricate construct, you must observe it with
untainted senses to obtain an objective perspective, which is not an
easy task with a thirty year old film let me tell you. Having said
that, if you are a long time Pink Floyd follower and/or are visiting
this most excellent Brain Damage web site regularly, you may think
there are no new surprises or perspectives in regards to Live at
Pompeii worth noting, and certainly no relevant information left
uncovered. Or is there?
On a purely personal note, my
first exposure to Pink Floyd was at a midnight cinema screening of the
Live at Pompeii film way back in 1974. I did not have the realization
at the uncorrupted age of twelve, but this momentous occasion was to be
a pivotal turning point in my life, and despite being forewarned that
the Floyd were unconventional if not downright weird, they intrigued me
to point of crawling out of my skin. With great anticipation I entered
the darkened movie theater with no preconceived expectations and left
some ninety minutes later with my innocent perceptions completely
shattered. Live at Pompeii exposed me to a whole new musical terrain,
one with no established borders or rules, composed by intrepid
explorers thinking way outside the map. To my amazement, the Floyd's
musical virtuosity often soared ecstatically into heavenly realms,
deconstructed fearlessly into chaos, or drifted aimlessly to surreal
visuals that were integral to the whole experience. In retrospect, the
Live at Pompeii film was a groundbreaking music documentary, and its
considerable influence on the popular entertainment scene today cannot
be underestimated. But where are we now?
As recently as last year (2002),
the upstart Aussie group The Vines released a volatile music video for
their debut single "Get Free." The setting is strangely familiar; a
young rock group playing with great bravado live in the white desert
sand, framed by sound equipment and huge lighting towers. While the
video is a subtle homage to Live at Pompeii's serene outdoor footage,
the overall tone changes drastically by video's end, watching as all
hell breaks loose as The Vines are singularly decimated by mother
nature's stormy wrath. Directed by Sophia Copella, daughter of director
Francis Ford Copella, and famous for her directorial debut movie The
Virgin Suicides, The Vines "Get Free" music video marks the latest
revisiting of Live at Pompeii's inimitable cinematic style.
But undoubtedly the most
outstanding music video to be fully influenced by Live at Pompeii's
rich atmosphere is the Beastie Boys' (1992) offering "Gratitude." Shot
on location in exotic New Zealand by director David Perez, it frames
the former obnoxious Rap group as a gritty post-punk groove band, set
outdoors bathed in brilliant daylight right in front of a steaming
azure blue lake. All of Live at Pompeii's now classic camera techniques
are utilized such as slow steady camera panning, picture-in-picture,
overhead shots of the drummer, close-up shots of bass guitar fretwork
and full screen grids of guitar solos, and the liberal use of blue
screen background techniques. However, the most obvious influence is a
more literal one; the slow panning of speaker cabinet rears sporting
the stenciled words "Pink Floyd London."
Perhaps the obvious Floyd
reference is not such a coincidence after all. Some time before the
"Gratitude" video shoot, the Beastie Boys appeared on MTV news speaking
about how they were searching the world over for vintage musical
instruments and old sound equipment to add some groovy sounds to their
Hip-Hop infused catalog. Nevertheless, it was quite a coup for the
Beastie Boys to procure some of the Floyd's old retired speaker
cabinets to elevate their street credibility. Further on in the
"Gratitude" video, without missing a stylistic opportunity, shows the
boys trudging through the dense desert sand submerged by billowy fog,
similar to the Floyd's brief but adventurous sojourn outdoors near
Pompeii. While another very impressive scene in "Gratitude" features a
panoramic shot of a vast channeled mountain, to equate the similarly
diverse countryside shown in Live at Pompeii. For the insatiably
curious among you, you'll find this compelling video and other
ground-breaking selections, including those videos directed by Spike
Jonze, on The Beastie Boy's Video Anthology DVD (2003).
Nowadays you simply cannot read
much of anything about Radiohead without the article or review
referencing Pink Floyd as a key influence by way of musical osmosis.
With the overwhelming commercial and critical success of their 1997
release Ok Computer, Radiohead found themselves drawing comparisons to
Pink Floyd's legendary status. Yet in a strange turn of events, during
Radiohead's 1998 tour documentary Meeting People Is Easy, one member
relates this surprising bit of Floyd trivia; "There was a documentary
done recently about Pink Floyd, and when it was shown to Pink Floyd
they refused to have it released because it basically showed them going
in and out of business meetings and board rooms, and discussing moving
money around the place." Clearly from witnessing the incessant activity
and oppressive tone displayed in Radiohead's documentary, you can
clearly understand how stress on the road has impacted the members of
Radiohead, much like the Floyd experienced in their post-Dark Side of
the Moon era.
While Radiohead's documentary had
the atmosphere of creeping malaise and growing discontent with the
music industry promotional machine, Live at Pompeii was for the most
part constructed of wide open spaces, albeit those haunted by the
specter of a volcanic catastrophe over a millennia ago. Director Adrian
Maben, working closely with the Floyd's approval, chose to place the
group in a Roman amphitheater in Pompeii, Italy during October 4-7,
1971. And in a conscious decision to avoid the Woodstock festival
scenario where the audience often overshadowed the music, Maben instead
set out to create a very empty, more austere setting with the
simplicity and pureness of a Zen rock garden. Also conspicuous by his
physical absence is keyboardist Rick Wright, although during the
Pompeii interview footage you can clearly hear Rick's voice, at no time
will you see his actual lips move. Moving back a few years ago on this,
Maben in interview said he wished to reinstate some of Rick's candid
interview sequences in the director's cut of the film, however at the
present time, such elusive footage remains to be seen.
Take a close look at documentary
director Adrian Maben's film resume and you'll discover a varied and
exceptional filmography. As seen here in Brain Damage news, his
documentary Monsieur Rene Magritte (1978), takes a comprehensive look
at Belgian surrealist artist Magritte, followed by his acclaimed Frames
from the Edge (1989). This contemporary documentary written, directed
and featuring commentary by Maben, focused on fashion and advertising
photographer Helmut Newton, often known for his sexually charged
photographic style, and starred among others, Charlotte Rampling,
Catherine Deneuve, Sigourney Weaver and Karl Lagerfeld.
One of Maben's latest projects
spanning the years 2001-2003 includes a couple of films shot in
South-East Asia entitled The Fall of the Divine Elephant. They compare
and contrast the pampered life of the fabled white elephant to the
struggle for survival of the ordinary Asian gray elephant reduced to
begging in the streets to make a living. The winner of many
international film awards, Adrian Maben lives and works in Paris, and
has directed many carefully selected documentaries including musical
and art films. He works often with his own camera and is particularly
interested in the marriage and links between form, content and music.
He is one of the directors who has successfully bridged the gap between
films shot in 16mm or 35mm and recordings made on video.
When Live at Pompeii had its
American premiere in New York on August 21, 1974 (the UK in November
1972), the now legendary Pink Floyd documentary thrilled countless
music fans, yet it also exposed the general public to director Adrian
Maben's deft cinematic style. Now nearly thirty years on, the
director's cut of Live at Pompeii will soon be released on DVD
presenting the film as Adrian Maben intended to a whole new audience.
Next time around in article number two of this Pompeii series, I'm
going to steer clear from the somewhat arid world of cinematography and
take a myopic look at the group's stellar musical performances and
revisit the press and fans reaction to the film. After thirty years of
walking through the sands of time, where will our curious journey take
us?
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