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IN SAYING EVERYTHING ABOUT A MOVIE? |
| JOY DIVISION (director: Grant Gee; screenwriter: Jon Savage; cinematographer: Grant Gee; editor: Jerry Chatar; cast: Tony Wilson, Annik Honoré, Peter Saville, Martin Hannett, Rob Gretton, Bernard Sumner, Stephen Morris, Peter Hook, Ian Curtis (archive footage), Richard Boon, Anton Corbijn, Kevin Cummins, Iain Gray, John Peel; Runtime: 94; MPAA Rating: R; producers: Tom Astor/Tom Atencio/Jacqui Edenbrow; The Weinstein Company; 2007-UK) |
| "Energetic
tell-all pic about the beginnings in 1976 of
the legendary post-punk rock band from the
grimy factory city of Manchester."
Reviewed
by Dennis Schwartz Grant
Gee ("Meeting People is Easy") helms this energetic
tell-all pic about the beginnings in 1976 of the
legendary post-punk rock band from the grimy factory
city of Manchester, who took the controversial name
Joy Division in 1977. The name was derived
from the Nazi armies nickname for its military brothel
for its officers. The biopic serves as both a telling
of the band's rise to popularity and of the city
digging out from ruin to shine again as a modern city
and all that would entail. Through invaluable footage,
we see in 1976 four young men in their early
twenties, Bernard Sumner, Stephen Morris, Peter Hooh
and Ian Curtis, from the post-industrial decayed
city of Manchester, a place in rubble where there
begins a Thatcher-sponsored rebuilding phase for its
infrastructure with massive ugly concrete buildings
taking the place of the unlivable dilapidated
housing. The lads, who do not know each other yet,
go to a local Sex Pistols concert at the Electric
Circus and are so inspired by the rebellious music,
seemingly in their blood, that they meet through a
newspaper ad and form their own punk rock band and
invent a novel electrical music and include
intelligent lyrics Their unique pulsating
music of alienation was the product of their
troubled bi-polar vocalist-lyricist
Ian Curtis, who sang in a frenzy as if possessed and
got his ideas from the likes of JG Ballard, William
S. Burroughs and Franz Kafka. With their first
album released, Unknown Pleasures, on
the indie label of Factory Records a surprise hit with
both critics and the public, the band was geared for
international fame. In 1980, on the eve of their first
American tour, the epileptic and emotionally fragile
23-year-old frontman, Ian Curtis, committed suicide in
his parents' home after separating from his wife
Deborah and promising to call his Belgian mistress Annik
Honoré before departing for a few months, but
never doing so. The band went on without him, and
in the 1980s reached great heights in popularity
and is still performing. Gee films a variety of talking heads involved with the rock business and the group, that include the late record producer Tony Wilson, the former NME music critic Paul Morley, the talented photographer Anton Corbijn who took the band's iconic photo on a bridge and Ian’s articulate Belgian lover Annik Honore. Ian’s wife Deborah refused to appear, but she's heard from time to time through quotes from her book Touching From A Distance. REVIEWED ON 2/19/2013 GRADE: A- Dennis Schwartz: "Ozus' World Movie Reviews" © ALL RIGHTS RESERVED DENNIS SCHWARTZ |