2 reviews
Duran Duran: Unstaged was a 2010 Duran Duran concert performed at the Mayan Theater in Los Angeles, filmed by David Lynch, and broadcast over the internet. Wednesday night it was turned into a Fathom event, in theaters for one night only.
I have reviewed concerts and films, but not both at the same time. I have been to Duran Duran concerts, but not since I have started writing reviews. Taking into consideration the merits of the concert, the film, and the theater experience will cover a lot of ground.
My previous shows happened on the Astronaut tour, which brought all five original band members together, and the All You Need Is Now tour. From that I know that Duran Duran stages phenomenal shows. Costumes, visual effects, and powerful performances combine into something that is obviously professional but doesn't feel stuffy or overdone. Copious amounts of charisma from the band members helps, but there is also a lot of expertise and savvy that is easy to overlook as you get carried away. Balancing those elements could be a difficult task for a filmmaker.
I am happy to report that being in the theater felt remarkably like being at a Duran Duran concert. I think making it available for only one night helped with that, turning it into an event that we had all chosen to participate in.
Most people did stay in their seats, which was different from a live show, but there was a lot of moving around in seats, singing along, and some shouting. There was that communal feeling and enthusiasm, even knowing that we were watching something from four years ago.
It was not just filmed as an ordinary concert either, because there was the broadcast going on. The primary different this made in the performance was the inclusion of special guests. They brought out Gerard Way of My Chemical Romance for "Planet Earth", Beth Ditto of Gossip for "Notorious", Mark Ronson for several songs, and Kelis for "The Man Who Stole A Leopard" and "Come Undone".
The guest performances were enjoyable on a musical level, but I think they were even more important for the sentimental factor. First of all you could see how excited the guests were to be included, reminding us how important and influential Duran Duran has been regardless of time periods and genres. In addition, seeing how sweet and supportive the band members were to their guests increased the emotional bond.
They are lovable. We know this, but seeing Roger hug Gerard at the end, after finally getting out from behind the drum kit, or seeing John wait for Beth to hug him, even though she had gotten in a hug earlier, gets the heart even more melted.
We had never known Kelis was pronounced that way, but then, Gerard isn't pronounced that way, so maybe Kelis isn't, but listening to Simon talk is so charming regardless. And then he told a total dad joke (How do you make a dog drink? Put him in the blender), but he is a dad now. They all are.
The film aspects worked pretty well for the most part. Often Lynch chose to overlay the visual effects over the band. These ranged from fairly amorphous objects like smoke, clouds, and flames to more concrete images like masks and houses. This made it possible to see both the visuals and what the band was doing, which was a good parallel for being at a show with a large screen behind the band. There were a few times when it was more obtrusive, with mixed results.
This was most distracting on "Sunrise", where the multiplying nude Barbies with blurred out faces could have been very effective for some type of commentary, but really did not seem to fit the song. Unfortunately, it felt like it deflated the song, which was tragic because that is a really good song.
On the other hand, the visuals for "The Man Who Stole A Leopard", while the initially appeared fairly abstract, shed a new light on the song for me which I hadn't been expecting at all.
Finally, while the footage for "Come Undone" was somewhat distracting, there is also something appropriate about completely ineffective grilling practices for a song about things coming undone, and I kind of loved the puppets. It felt so David Lynch, more than any other part of the concert.
Overall I have to call it a success, as a concert, as a movie, and as a Fathom event.
I have reviewed concerts and films, but not both at the same time. I have been to Duran Duran concerts, but not since I have started writing reviews. Taking into consideration the merits of the concert, the film, and the theater experience will cover a lot of ground.
My previous shows happened on the Astronaut tour, which brought all five original band members together, and the All You Need Is Now tour. From that I know that Duran Duran stages phenomenal shows. Costumes, visual effects, and powerful performances combine into something that is obviously professional but doesn't feel stuffy or overdone. Copious amounts of charisma from the band members helps, but there is also a lot of expertise and savvy that is easy to overlook as you get carried away. Balancing those elements could be a difficult task for a filmmaker.
I am happy to report that being in the theater felt remarkably like being at a Duran Duran concert. I think making it available for only one night helped with that, turning it into an event that we had all chosen to participate in.
Most people did stay in their seats, which was different from a live show, but there was a lot of moving around in seats, singing along, and some shouting. There was that communal feeling and enthusiasm, even knowing that we were watching something from four years ago.
It was not just filmed as an ordinary concert either, because there was the broadcast going on. The primary different this made in the performance was the inclusion of special guests. They brought out Gerard Way of My Chemical Romance for "Planet Earth", Beth Ditto of Gossip for "Notorious", Mark Ronson for several songs, and Kelis for "The Man Who Stole A Leopard" and "Come Undone".
The guest performances were enjoyable on a musical level, but I think they were even more important for the sentimental factor. First of all you could see how excited the guests were to be included, reminding us how important and influential Duran Duran has been regardless of time periods and genres. In addition, seeing how sweet and supportive the band members were to their guests increased the emotional bond.
They are lovable. We know this, but seeing Roger hug Gerard at the end, after finally getting out from behind the drum kit, or seeing John wait for Beth to hug him, even though she had gotten in a hug earlier, gets the heart even more melted.
We had never known Kelis was pronounced that way, but then, Gerard isn't pronounced that way, so maybe Kelis isn't, but listening to Simon talk is so charming regardless. And then he told a total dad joke (How do you make a dog drink? Put him in the blender), but he is a dad now. They all are.
The film aspects worked pretty well for the most part. Often Lynch chose to overlay the visual effects over the band. These ranged from fairly amorphous objects like smoke, clouds, and flames to more concrete images like masks and houses. This made it possible to see both the visuals and what the band was doing, which was a good parallel for being at a show with a large screen behind the band. There were a few times when it was more obtrusive, with mixed results.
This was most distracting on "Sunrise", where the multiplying nude Barbies with blurred out faces could have been very effective for some type of commentary, but really did not seem to fit the song. Unfortunately, it felt like it deflated the song, which was tragic because that is a really good song.
On the other hand, the visuals for "The Man Who Stole A Leopard", while the initially appeared fairly abstract, shed a new light on the song for me which I hadn't been expecting at all.
Finally, while the footage for "Come Undone" was somewhat distracting, there is also something appropriate about completely ineffective grilling practices for a song about things coming undone, and I kind of loved the puppets. It felt so David Lynch, more than any other part of the concert.
Overall I have to call it a success, as a concert, as a movie, and as a Fathom event.
And "David Lynch has teleported himself to another dimension" when he doesnt come on stage at the end is one of the more sublime moments I have ever seen in a concert film.
I dont come to this as a mega fan of the band or a snob; certainly this has some songs I'm not that wild about, like some of their "new album" tracks (though "Girl Panic" is fun), or the slower ballads. But there were more hits and numbers I didn't remember they did like "Notorious" or even the 007 View to Kill song, and it's funny maybe only to me how "Girls on Film" is to them what "10th Avenue Freeze Out" is to Bruce Springstreen live in the encore (as in when they jam out and introduce the band). All yhe same, the band and singer are performing as sonically charged as you could probably ever think to see them, at least this late into their career, and the key thing for me is that David Lynch is absolutely game to experiment with image manipulation and super-imposition.
I almost wondered at times if there were some songs he possinly wasn't even crazy about as others, since he would sometimes seem to lessen the visual effects and inspired fragments of particles and smoke and substances and shards he was over-laying (ie "Ordinary World" is just a little wisp of smoke, like he just turned on a humidifier in the room). But that's the exception; most of this is filled with the kinds of objects and ideas that make up the wonderful dreamscape that comes from that Meditative-packed mind of his, and over one number he has dancing Barbie dolls while in another there's, oh I don't know, repeatedly torpedoing airplanes and nails going into... something!
Point is, this is perhaps a big ask for some of the Duran Duran fans who want to just watch their guys and gals play the hits and classics and some new stuff on stage (sorry, Mark in accounting, your wife may not be thrilled), and if you're a Lynch nut that isn't into the band... oh, what am I saying, you all saw every act on Twin Peaks the Return, so what do I know. Unstaged is a phantasmagorical pop spectacle, soulful, occasionally bland (for my taste), and often overloaded with deliciously bizarre and horrific sights. You do get all the hits you might expect, and you get a director aiming for exactly what pleases him - which may include, oh, a spatula tapping on a grill with hot dogs to keep the beat to "Come Undone." So it goes.
And you know what? After a long day for a working class stiff like me, they played "Planet Earth," albeit with a guy from (reads notes) My Chenical Romance, and that is one of the great underrated (?) Bangers of the 1980s and it had perfectly deranged artwork of a creepy melted-face balloon figure superimposed over a classically-electrically charged suburban Lynch house, and occasionally footage of Earth was sprinkled in there during the song, all of it superimposed over the concert footage. What does it mean? Search me. I'm happy.
I dont come to this as a mega fan of the band or a snob; certainly this has some songs I'm not that wild about, like some of their "new album" tracks (though "Girl Panic" is fun), or the slower ballads. But there were more hits and numbers I didn't remember they did like "Notorious" or even the 007 View to Kill song, and it's funny maybe only to me how "Girls on Film" is to them what "10th Avenue Freeze Out" is to Bruce Springstreen live in the encore (as in when they jam out and introduce the band). All yhe same, the band and singer are performing as sonically charged as you could probably ever think to see them, at least this late into their career, and the key thing for me is that David Lynch is absolutely game to experiment with image manipulation and super-imposition.
I almost wondered at times if there were some songs he possinly wasn't even crazy about as others, since he would sometimes seem to lessen the visual effects and inspired fragments of particles and smoke and substances and shards he was over-laying (ie "Ordinary World" is just a little wisp of smoke, like he just turned on a humidifier in the room). But that's the exception; most of this is filled with the kinds of objects and ideas that make up the wonderful dreamscape that comes from that Meditative-packed mind of his, and over one number he has dancing Barbie dolls while in another there's, oh I don't know, repeatedly torpedoing airplanes and nails going into... something!
Point is, this is perhaps a big ask for some of the Duran Duran fans who want to just watch their guys and gals play the hits and classics and some new stuff on stage (sorry, Mark in accounting, your wife may not be thrilled), and if you're a Lynch nut that isn't into the band... oh, what am I saying, you all saw every act on Twin Peaks the Return, so what do I know. Unstaged is a phantasmagorical pop spectacle, soulful, occasionally bland (for my taste), and often overloaded with deliciously bizarre and horrific sights. You do get all the hits you might expect, and you get a director aiming for exactly what pleases him - which may include, oh, a spatula tapping on a grill with hot dogs to keep the beat to "Come Undone." So it goes.
And you know what? After a long day for a working class stiff like me, they played "Planet Earth," albeit with a guy from (reads notes) My Chenical Romance, and that is one of the great underrated (?) Bangers of the 1980s and it had perfectly deranged artwork of a creepy melted-face balloon figure superimposed over a classically-electrically charged suburban Lynch house, and occasionally footage of Earth was sprinkled in there during the song, all of it superimposed over the concert footage. What does it mean? Search me. I'm happy.
- Quinoa1984
- Sep 11, 2023
- Permalink