| Ewan McGregor, Jonathan Rhys-Meyers,
Toni Collette, Christian Bale, Eddie Izzard, Emily Woof
At the 1998 Cannes Film Festival, American independent director
Todd Haynes (Safe) received the "Artistic Achievement"
award for this re-creation of the UK glam rock scene of the early
'70s. Glam rock star Brian Slade (Jonathan Rhys Meyers), who does
a character named Maxwell Demon, predicts his own death onstage.
As per his prediction, this happens, but when the killing is exposed
as a hoax, it marks the end of Slade's stardom. A decade later,
in 1984, Brit reporter and former Slade fan Arthur Stuart (Christian
Bale), who witnesses the hoax murder, gets the assignment to do
a "Whatever Happened To..?" article, and the film's plot
suddenly goes into a prismatic Citizen Kane mode, reflecting various
angles on Slade's life and career. Arthur visits the wheelchair-bound
Cecil (Michael Feast), who discovered Slade, and then tracks Slade
through his early life and his initial encounter with outrageous,
maniacal American singer Curt Wild (Ewan McGregor). Slade's rise
begins as manager Jerry Divine (Brit comedian Eddie Izzard) moves
in to take over the performer's career. Ex-wife Mandy Slade (Toni
Collette), interviewed by Arthur in a dimly lit nightclub, has memories
going back to their initial 1969 Sombrero Club encounter. Their
marriage paralleled his Bowie-like ascent to fame as an innovative,
bisexual rock star pushing the limits. Idolized by teens, Slade
teamed up for a while with the drug-addicted Wild. Eventually, the
marriage of Mandy and Slade comes to an end, and she hasn't seen
him in seven years when she's interviewed by Arthur. The soundtrack
features vintage music by Bryan Ferry, Lou Reed and Brian Eno, plus
new tunes. Some background on the making of Velvet Goldmine is documented
in producer Christine Vachon's book Shooting to Kill: How an Independent
Producer Blasts Through the Barriers to Make Movies That Matter
(Avon, 1998) by Vachon with Slate film critic David Edelstein. |