A behind-the-scenes story about the music business
starring Harvey Keitel as a principled record producer, That’s the Way of the World isn’t a great film by any measure, but
it vividly evokes a specific era, and it addresses meaningful themes related to
the eternal conflict between art and commerce. Plus, the movie’s got great jams
courtesy of R&B group Earth, Wind & Fire, the members of which portray
an ersatz act called the Group—EWF lays down smooth grooves including “Reasons,”
“Shining Star,” and “That’s the Way of the World.” Keitel plays Coleman
Buckmaster (one of the best character names ever, just sayin’), a successful
producer known for creating imaginative arrangements. When we meet Coleman,
he’s deep into sessions with the Group, a black ensemble making densely
atmospheric tracks. Coleman considers the Group artistically important, but his
backers don’t dig the sound. Execs order Coleman to set the Group aside and
work on a single by an all-white vocal group called the Pages, whose style is
so square they make the Carpenters seem hip by comparison. (In a great
flourish, the leader of the Pages is played by Bert Parks, who spent years
serenading Miss America during televised beauty contests.) Coleman agrees to
cut the vocal act’s record, planning to get the job done quickly so he can
return to the Group, but things get complicated when Coleman starts romancing
Pages singer Velour (Cynthia Bostick).
Although this set-up has plenty of
dramatic potential, writer Robert Lipsyte and director/producer Sig Shore
devote more energy to capturing details than to generating narrative momentum.
As such, there’s lots of great stuff depicting the flow of recording sessions
and the unethical practices of the record business. In one memorable scene, an
executive says it takes “payola, layola, viola, and drugola” to get a song on
the radio; elsewhere, Coleman speaks for artists throughout history by asking
an anxious financier, “Do you want it good or do you want it now?” Shore, who
produced the Superfly movies, doesn’t
break any new ground with this, his directorial debut—his work falls somewhere
between perfunctory and underwhelming. As for Keitel, among the most quixotic
actors in Hollywood history, he delivers one of his patented non-performances.
He’s mildly charming in some moments and fiery in a few others, but mostly he’s
so internalized that many nuances fail to register. Still, these are relatively
minor complaints given how interesting That’s
the Way of the World is from start to finish. Sure, there’s a kitsch factor
(Keitel roller-skates!), but the picture is hard to beat as a travelogue
through a world seldom seen by outside eyes.
That’s
the Way of the World: GROOVY
This was colossally misconceived and apparently flopped for very good reason ... Bad word of mouth because it actually has extremely little in the "way" of EW&F full song versions ... One has to suspect that the people who made this film were cynical in exactly the same ways that they depict the cynical record company -- since the entire running time is concerned with Keitel's duplicitous tanglings with the schlock group and its status-seeking star ... As for EWF, you get a lot of instrumental backdrops & then ninety -- count 'em, ninety -- seconds of a live performance as the credits roll ... Blink & you'll miss it ...
ReplyDeleteBasically this manages to seriously offend in both directions simultaneously ... About the only musician for whom I have as much respect as I do for Maurice White ... is Karen Carpenter ... So I also didn't appreciate her pastiched as a hustler who would let any sleazy DJ run his hand up her thigh ...
As far as a revealing slice of the music business, even "Wild Guitar" with Arch Hall Jr. tells it like it is just as well or better than this travesty ... OK well, just my tuppence ...