Rock and Roll Will Never
Die, Part One-Phillip Seymour Hoffman’s
“Pirate Radio” ( )- A Film Review
DVD Review
By Film Critic Emeritus
Sam Lowell
[Yes, I am now retired
but I did so with the caveat that I would on occasion dredge up my tired brain
and write a little something if it interested me. Current film critic in this
space, my old friend and adversary from American
Film Gazette days, Sandy Salmon has mentioned to me on many occasions that
he had not been washed clean (my expression not his) by the high tide of rock
and roll that was the common lynchpin of our generation. Moreover he did not
“give a damn” (his expression) about rock and roll reflecting in my view that
stiff upper lip upbringing that he went through in New York City which included
huge doses of classic music. You know Beethoven, Brahms, Mozart and the crew.
The guys that the late rock and roll legend Chuck Berry gave notice to in his
classic statement of the case for rock-Roll
Over Beethoven- that some new sheriffs were in town.
The long and short of it
was that I noticed that one of the films up for review was Phillip Seymour Hoffman’s
Pirate Radio which is nothing but a
rather recent slice of life homage to the genre. Sandy was not going to review
the film and so I have entered the lists to save this beauty of a tribute from
statutory neglect. I might point out that another such effort, Jack Black’s School Of Rock was also slated for
extinction and so I will review that one shortly as well. Sam Lowell]
Pirate Radio, starring
Philipp Seymour Hoffman, 2009
Probably all films are
directed to the largest audience possible although they may be particularly
targeted to a certain segment like I believe that the film under review Phillip
Seymour Hoffman’s Pirate Radio while
entirely suitable for all audiences has special meaning for those of us who
were washed clean by the that big wave of rock and roll that swept over us in
our 1950s and early 1960 youths. I am not foolish enough at this late date in
the 21st century some sixty plus years after the genre first
exploded onto the scene to tell anybody that rock and roll has had the staying
power to ignite the two or so generations after the explosion but I will
venture to say as I have in the headline to this review that one way or another
rock and roll will never die. One hundred years from now, especially now that
YouTube technology has insured preservation some shy, backward, alienated
teenagers, tweens too, will be snapping their figured to Chuck Berry’s Roll Over Beethoven. And maybe watch
this film to try and understand what it was like when men and women performed
rock and roll for keeps. Will gravitate toward the film if for no other reason
than the time capsule sound track will guide them to the source.
Here’s the play. If you
can believe this back in the day, back in the early 1960s when rock had already
passed its first bloom “the authorities” in this case the British authorities
but it could have been any governmental agents, churchmen, school
administrators, and above all parents in America (or any place on the planet
where the category of “teenager” had currency) banned rock and roll from the
state-run airwaves. Damn. Except some guys thought of an ingenious way to go
around that prohibition by rigging up ships with radio studio equipment and
related technologies and anchoring them out beyond the British legal
jurisdiction, anchored them in international waters. The kids in the British
Isles just like hear then could listen on their coveted transistor radios up in
the privacy of their parents forbidden bedrooms. (Transistor radios by the way
were the iPod /MP3s of their day.)
One drawback was that
the radio station crew had to stay on board and so the wacky crew and their
antics and animosities headlined by Hoffman are given full play. That did not
stop the furor to live and die by the motto “drugs, sex, and rock and roll
(although the one female on board was a lesbian there was no shortage of
mainland female listeners ready, willing and able to take the nearest boat out
to join the crew. Various segments of the film deal with the sex lives, or
non-sex lives of the larger than life looney tunes on board.
Naturally this flaunting
of the law, this thumb in the eye drove the governmental bureaucrats crazy,
drove them to a white heat to get rid of the crew of crazies and degenerates
who were corrupting the morals of the youth of the nation (this would be mild
compared to what would go down later in that same decade). And in the end
through treachery and convenient legislation they would prove victorious in
their attempts to shut down the operations. Left the ship being highlighted out
in the deep to flounder. But in the end the crew was saved by their audience,
literally, coming out and rescuing them. Yeah, with an audience like that no
wonder everybody believed, fervently believed that rock and roll would never
die. Enough said.
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