The
Wild Boys –Part 264 – Hank Williams’ The Last Ride- A Film Review
From
The Pen Of Frank Jackman
DVD
Review
The
Last Ride, 2012
Live
fast, die young, and make a good corpse is a mantra that Hank Williams’ who
last ride before his premature death is the subject of the film under review,
ah, called The Last Ride, lived by. Every
generation, every niche cultural enclave has its iconic wild boys (thus far mainly
wild boys, although if things even out the wild women, wild women in my sense,
should not be far behind) who stirred the imagination, who made their devotees
believe, believe that the moment had to be seized and shaken for what it was
worth. Names like John Reed, Hemingway, the young Marlon Brando, James Dean,
Jack Kerouac (and his mad band of associates, Neal Cassady, Allen Ginsberg, Gregory
Corso and William Burroughs), Jim Morrison of The Doors, Hunter Thompson and so
on. Not all of them died young as Hank William did, although not for not trying,
but they all listened to their own drummer and left a cultural marker on the
planet.
Of
course Hank’s niche was new style (then new style –okay) country music that shifted
the beat from slow mournful old timey Jimmy Rodgers back road and Carter Family
mountain-etched music to more contemporary and personal concerns with a jump
band as back up. My connection, my tenuous and rebellious connection, to Hank’s
kind of music was hearing it waft through my growing up in the late1950s house in
Hullsville south of Boston when my father, a son of Appalachia, would play or
listen to old Hank and companions. I, a child of rock and roll insistent in listening
to my own drummer, took a long time, a very long time to learn to appreciate
Hank beyond my father’s hard rock-etched dreams.
All
this above as prelude to the simple fact that as a late-comer I was not privy
to a lot of Hank Williams’ life story and so rather let his music speak for
him. So I was not aware until viewing this film about the manner of his death, although
I had an inkling from reading liner notes on some of his CDs that he was another
in that short line of wild boys who had to keep moving, had to keep pushing the
envelope, had to live out there on edge city where the wild boys need to hang
out.
So
the plot here is not what drives this film, hell, the title says it all, it’s a
cinematic recreation of Hank’s last ride but what drive it is the bonding
between an essentially lonely, sick man (at only 29 so you know he sowed some
serious wild oats) and the last man who saw him alive, his young hired for the occasion
of getting him to his next concert chauffer. What drives this thing is the
interplay between the two, between the country boy chauffer’s coming of age and
Hank’s tumble into that die young good night. Most of the interchange done inside
that big old Caddy that was a symbol that one had arrived in the big time in
America. And that simple plot interplay worked whatever the cinematic licenses
were taken about the actual facts of Brother Williams’ death. But see dying
young for some guys (or gals) is only prelude, some sixty years later his songs
like Cold, Cold Heart that I heard
like I said almost from the cradle still sound fresh. And the soundtrack here
has some very good material acting as backdrop as Hank moves to that last long
lonely ride.
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