Ahoy, squirts! Quint here with two AICN regulars, Capone and Anton Sirius. Capone you know from his weekly thoughts on the new releases and Anton Sirius you'll remember for being our man on the scene every year for Toronto. They've both seen WALK THE LINE and want to tell you about it. Capone loved it and Anton had some serious issues, so read on for the point/counter-point. Enjoy!
Hey everyone. Çapone in Chicago here. It’s almost impossible to fathom that
just a little over a year after arguably the finest biopic made about a
musician, RAY, was released that another film comes along about an equally
influential player that might actually be better. Also covering the death of
a brother to the kicking of a life- and career-endangering substance
addiction, WALK THE LINE chronicles the early years of country and rock
legend Johnny Cash, played and sung with eerie accuracy by Joaquin Phoenix,
who may have just surpassed Philip Seymour Hoffman’s portrayal as Truman
Capote as the front-runner for an acting Oscar.
Unlike Jamie Foxx’s dead-on impersonation of Ray Charles in RAY, Phoenix
isn’t going for a performance based solely on how closely he resembles the
Man in Black. Instead he concentrates on attitude, mannerisms, and above
all, stage presence, including an uncanny vocal turn as Phoenix (unlike
Foxx) does all his own singing here. As much as this sounds like a gimmick,
the effect of hearing Phoenix’s vocals sends this film into the stratosphere
of greatness. The impact, especially on fans of Cash’s music, is undeniable
and overwhelming.
Cash’s life is faithfully reconstructed, from his childhood picking cotton
on the family farm in Arkansas to his loving mother (Shelby Lynne) and
critical father (especially when the favored older brother dies). Robert
Patrick’s turn as the nasty Ray Cash is established as the driving force in
Johnny’s life. In his quest to win his father’s approval, he never gave up
his dream of being a singer, even after getting married to Vivian (Ginnifer
Goodwin), having two daughters, and moving to Memphis to be closer to the
heart of music in America. Cash managed to get an audition with Sun Records
founder Sam Phillips (Dallas Roberts), and in one of the film’s best scenes,
Phillips encourages Cash to drop the gospels music he and his amateur band
are playing and try something different. When Cash tentatively pulls out an
original tune called “Folsom Prison Blues,” nothing in music will ever be
the same.
WALK THE LINE is like a trip through history as Cash gets signed to Sun
Records and hits the road with the likes of Elvis Presley, Jerry Lee Lewis,
Carl Perkins, Roy Orbison, and even one-time child singing sensation and
member of the legendary Carter Family singers, June Carter (Reese
Witherspoon, also providing her own singing). I’m a bit baffled by criticism
I’ve read about Witherspoon’s singing in this film. First off, it sounds
fine. Second, June Carter said on more than one occasion (including a couple
times in this movie) that she wasn’t much of a singer, and that her real
talents were having a sassy personality on the radio, being a crowd favorite
and impressive foil for Cash, and later, songwriting. Witherspoon captures
all of these here, and gives the best performance of her career. The
flirting between the two is fearless, even though both are married nearly
the entire time they played together.
As if to get our support and validation for Johnny and June’s eventual
affair, filmmaker James Mangold (GIRL, INTERRUPTED, COP LAND, HEAVY,
IDENTITY) portrays Cash’s first wife Vivian as a shrew who doesn’t support
his music even after he begins making a living with it. Whether it’s
accurate or not, it feels unfair and may be the film’s only flaw. Of course,
no one is portrayed with more faults than Cash himself as he begins a nasty
pill and booze habit that lasts him many years and nearly cost him his
career and his future with June. Phoenix plays Cash as if he invented the
term “son of a bitch,” and really shows us his acting chops like we’ve never
seen him do before. Witherspoon doesn’t play June as an entirely supportive
woman in these early years. Instead, she is a protective mother of two of
her own daughters, who doesn’t want Cash’s drugged-out ways anywhere near
her family.
WALK THE LINE's emotional epicenter is Cash’s legendary performance (and
live recording) at Folsom Prison, and the recreation of that event here is
astonishingly energetic, as Cash ignores the advise of the prison warden to
still to gospel musical and unleashes a series of songs about death and
killing and prison life that was unprecedented. WALK THE LINE maintains the
dark and gritty feel of Cash’s music, while hinting at a future filled with
sensitivity and class. The film also does something far more important: it
reminds us the Johnny Cash used to rock as a performer and a songwriter.
There is life and fire in WALK THE LINE, and my guess is that you’ll leave
the theatre humming any one of a half-dozen Cash tunes because you just
can’t help yourself. This is one of the great films of the year.
Capone

Here's Anton's reaction!
Walk the Line (2005, directed by James Mangold)
I saw this one back in September, but it took me a
while to sort through it in my head, so instead of an
early peek you get a thorough one instead.
Make a list of the quintessential American males of
the 20th century, and Johnny Cash is going to be right
near the top, jockeying for position with Muhammed Ali
and Ted Williams and Henry Ford and Martin Luther
King. To call him iconic is probably an
understatement; archetypal might be more accurate,
given the way mass media has burned his voice and
image into our brains. A film about his life, coming
so soon after his death, faces a massive challenge –
not just to do justice to the oh-so flesh and blood
person, but also to the legend of the Man in Black we
all carry inside our heads.
Walk the Line tries. It really does. But like a
handful of pills on a warm summer night, with your
friends telling you it’s a great way to keep the buzz
going, one wrong decision can undo so much that is
right.
The film opens in the right place – the yard of Folsom
Prison, with the camera creeping towards the distant
thunder of feet stomping as a literally captive
audience waits for a man to come sing their pain. Cash
waits in the machine shop, staring at a table saw
(and already, here, something is bothering me about
Joaquin Phoenix’s performance...)
saw, lost in reverie, and we’re off – flashing back
through his life, from childhood and desperate search
for direction as a young man to Sam Phillips and his
first wife Vivian, from his first staggering career
peaks to his terrible personal lows, from damnation to
June Carter, his salvation. Walk the Line hits all the
beats it needs to of the early part of Cash’s life,
and hits them in a distinctly Mangoldian way. In his
best films (not so much, maybe, in Kate & Leopold)
James Mangold shows an understanding of how to use
silence to portray internal turmoil, and it’s a skill
that serves him very well here. For a film, and a
life, as loud as this one when the stage lights are
on, Mangold doesn’t overlook the quiet moments, when
Cash had nowhere to hide from his pain but inside a
prescription bottle.
The performances here are mostly excellent, although
more in the “serving the needs of the film” way than
in the “give me a little gold bald guy” way. Phoenix
is intense; Reese Witherspoon is very good, although
she doesn’t have a whole lot to do – the film is based
on two of Cash’s autobiographies, and in Johnny Cash’s
eyes June Carter was an angel, a perfect woman, and
portraying a perfect woman doesn’t exactly give
Witherspoon much to work with. Shooter Jennings even
gets a chance to play his dad, which is a nice touch.
It’s not until Robert Patrick re-appears as Cash’s
father though, at an awkwardly momentous Thanksgiving
dinner, that it sinks in for me what is wrong with
Phoenix’s performance. In five minutes of screen time
at the book ends of the film Patrick portrays both the
drunken father who menaced Cash as a child, and the
older, wiser man who understands that the adult Cash
has nothing until he earns back his self-respect, and
his own role in taking that self-respect away from his
son in the first place. It’s really an incredible
piece of work by an actor whose career is probably
always going to be overshadowed by the emotionless
liquid metal killing machine that brought him into the
public eye.
But it killed the film for me. Because in sketching
out the entire arc of Ray Cash’s life in just five
minutes, it illustrated how impossible Phoenix’s task
actually was, and how far from the mark he’d actually
fallen. Robert Patrick had the luxury of playing both
ends of Ray Cash’s story, and thus could show how the
seeds of the man at the end were there all along in
the man at the beginning.
Phoenix can’t do that. The film, essentially, covers
the pre-television portion of Johnny Cash’s life.
Phoenix is portraying the man at the beginning, but
Johnny himself gets to play the man at the end, the
man whose image we all carry inside our heads. He had
find some way to dovetail his Johnny Cash into the
real one, and he simply falls short. There’s really
nothing inherent in his performance that says “Hello,
I’m Johnny Cash.” He does a fair job of nailing the
singing voice, although he wisely doesn’t really try
to get Johnny’s speaking voice, but beyond those kinds
of surface details there was simply no indication to
me that he was playing anything other than Generic
Tortured Musician. And this is not the fault of the
director, or the script. There are more than a few
moments and allusions than could have been used as
springboards to hint at the Johnny Cash-to-be who we
know is going to emerge from this crucible, but
Phoenix seemed to deliberately pass them up.
It’s not that he’s acting badly. His craft is fine.
But when the real Johnny Cash in my head answered the
question, “You look like you’re going to a funeral”
with “Maybe I am”, implicit in that answer was that
the funeral might be his own. When Joaquin Phoenix’s
Johnny Cash answers it, he’s making a joke. The real
Johnny Cash in my head covered Kris Kristofferson and
Nine Inch Nails and Nick Cave because he understood
that pain doesn’t have a genre, that something which
speaks to one group of people can speak to everyone if
given a chance. Joaquin Phoenix’s Johnny Cash barely
knows who Bob Dylan is.
Let me put it to you this way. If this were an
unauthorized biopic – if the names and events had been
changed enough to avoid any lawsuits – you would have
had to tell me it was really about Johnny Cash.
Because there is nothing in Phoenix’s performance that
echoes the man I listened to and admired.
If Cash had lived in an earlier time, Phoenix probably
could have gotten away with it. That kind of
performance in a film about, say, Hank Williams Sr.
(hell, what Joaquin did on screen would have fit a
film about him just as well – I’m sure Hank trashed a
dressing room or two) would have been fine, because
there’s no direct point of comparison. Hank Sr. is
nothing more than an idea now; Johnny is still an
image, and an indelible one at that. But rather than
trying to appropriate that image and make it his own,
Phoenix simply walks away from it and ignores it. And
that was a mistake.
I’m sure the film will do well. The music is of course
fantastic; even if Phoenix (and Witherspoon, bless her
heart) aren’t quite up to the task of matching Johnny
and June’s vocals, what having them perform the songs
does is throw the songs themselves into sharper
relief, and few artists have a stronger catalogue than
Johnny Cash. There may even be multiple awards coming
for the movie.
But it felt like a failure to me. An impressive,
well-intentioned failure.
Rodney Crowell, Roseanne Cash’s ex-husband, has an
anecdote about one of his first meetings with Johnny.
He’d just started to get serious with Roseanne, and
Johnny and June had summoned him to the family home.
Being summoned to appear before Johnny Cash is not
something you take lightly, especially when you’re a
young up-and-coming country singer yourself. He and
Roseanne boarded a plane and, nervous as hell, Rodney
began downing drinks like, well, like he was heading
to a funeral. Once there, some fuss was made about
sleeping arrangements or the like. Rodney was feeling
his oats, and so he reared up and started in on how he
and Roseanne were adults and in love and what they did
was their own business, and likely a lot else besides
that he probably shouldn’t have been saying to a
prospective father-in-law, much less this particular
prospective father-in-law.
After he’d wound down, Johnny just looked at him and
said, “Son, I don’t know you well enough to miss you
if you were gone.”
That’s about how I feel about Walk the Line.
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