| Velvet
Goldmine
Todd Haynes US/UK
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| There are a lot of similarities between the events surrounding glam
rock and the persona of Oscar Wilde," says Todd Haynes of the milieu covered
in his competition film, Velvet Gold-mine. "I think of David Bowie, in
particular, the pose and all of that... Glamrock utilised artifice and
theatrical tropes."
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| Glam rock, a product of the early 70s, was something of
a reaction to the previous decade of flower power and to a certain machismo
which, in retrospect, was associated with it. It was a largely British
phenomenon that just barely reached the US. Nevertheless, it took an American
director and his producer, Christine Vachon, to bring it to the screen.
There are countless non-American directors who have gone to America and made films about historical events in the US. Haynes has gone in the opposite direction, detailing a story that transpires in England in a social milieu that is peculiarly English. Jumping outside of his own culture to direct a film was not a daunting experience for the director. "I never make films from knowledge I have of the subject," Haynes explained.
"I need to have something that I don't understandÉ My first film,
Poison, for example, was really an investigation. I could not recreate
Genet, so I had to find a way to bring the writing to film."
The film is an investigation of imagination, memory, nostalgia and sexual identity. "The early 70s were a time when lines were blurring," Haynes continued. "We all felt that we were touched by androgyny." Producer Christine Vachon agreed. "It was not just a time when the lines
were blurring," she said, "it was a time when the lines virtually disappeared.
The lines didn't matter."
Vachon has made a reputation for producing low-budget films, many of
which have been gay-themed. In 1994, she was awarded the Frameline Award
for Outstanding Achievement in Lesbian and Gay Media. But she rejects the
pigeon-holing that comes with such an award.
The story for Velvet Goldmine originated with Haynes' editor, James Lyons. Haynes wrote the script, having researched it during the lulls in financing -- "of which there were many," he said – for Safe. "It's really kind of a comment on the artifice of performance," Haynes told Moving Pictures. "It's also about the seductiveness of the music." For those who were a part of the glamrock scene, both in England and elsewhere, it is likely that the film's soundtrack will invoke strong waves of nostalgia. Songs ranging from Brian Eno's Needle in the Camel's Eye to Andy Pratt's Avenging Angel, to songs from Bryan Ferry, Lou Reed and others back the Citizen Kane-like investigation of the fictional, mythic Brian Slade. Jeff Sipe |
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| FILM CREDITS | |
| Producer | Christine Vachon |
| Director | Todd Haynes |
| Screenplay | Todd Haynes |
| Photo | Maryse Alberti |
| Prod Co. | Zenith |
| Prod Design | Christopher Hobbs |
| Editor | James Lyons |
| Cast | Jonathan Rhys-Myer, Christian Bale, Ewen McGregor |
| Running Time | 120 mins |
| International Sales | Goldwyn |