The Trials And Tribulations
Of The Generation Of ’68 Tipping Its Hat-
Honky-Tonk Man-The Times and Troubles of Hank Williams-“I Saw The Light”
(2015)-A Film Review
DVD Review
By Sam Lowell
I Saw The Light,
starring Tom Hiddleston, 2015
I remember one time several
years ago in reviewing a Hank William Golden Classic CD that although I was
Northern born boy I had actually been down in the South while I was in my
mother’s womb. Now that would not be of any particular note except somehow country
music long suppressed was in my genes, made up my DNA since I did not find out
until much later that my own father played in a country music band, did covers
of Hank Williams’ song so you can see where I have made a special exception
when it comes to Hank. My late mother told me that my father would sing Cold, Cold Heart to me to quiet me down.
So except for maybe an outlaw country minute in the early 1980s when country
music was moving away from Nashville and the Grand Old Opry restraints Hank is
the only I give a bye to. And off of a viewing of the film under review, I
Saw The Light, I made no mistake in that decision.
Probably everybody knows a
Hank Williams song, or a cover of it because almost everybody from pop to folk
to rock and roll has tipped his or her hat to the man, one example being the elusive
Bob Dylan who even in his most folky heyday was sitting up in his hotel room in
some far off land singing The Lost Highway. I have chosen that
particular song because Hank’s whirlwind live aptly fits the lyrics to the
song. The film deals in passing with his young life starting out being escorted
everywhere by a very demanding mother who had some sense that her son was a
notch above the hokey stuff that was passing for country music back in the mid
to late 1940s when Hank made his mark. Deals with the usual musician’s dilemma
of getting a hearing from some record company who will take a chance on the
performer.
The heart of the film though
deals with the other stuff besides the music. First off his stormy love-hate
relationship with his first wife Audrey who drove him crazy (and he she) and
which created the ups and downs of his life. Then there was the drinking and
drugs (the drug part as usual with all performers then keep hidden by a wall
sealed with seven seals). The physical medical problems too some of which
contributed to his early death. And the other women, including wife number two,
which gave him his reputation as a honky-tonk man as per the title of this
entry.
But in the end you really
do have to go back the music, the incredible number of songs that he wrote and
that we serious hits in that short six- year span when he was the
king-hell-king of the hill in country music. More than that though the effect
of music can be summed up in the scene in the film where he was being
interviewed by a reporter who asked him why he was so popular. Answer: his
songs made the average listener forget about their woes. That was a heavy
burden to carry, in the end too heavy. See this well-done film with great
covers of Hanks’s songs done in his style and with his energy.
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