Late in Coal Miner’s Daughter, the acclaimed biopic
of country-music legend Loretta Lynn, there’s a telling remark about fame:
“Gettin’ here is one thing, and bein’ here’s another.” That the line is spoken
not by Lynn, played to Oscar-winning perfection by Sissy Spacek, but rather by
her husband, Mooney, portrayed by Tommy Lee Jones, speaks volumes. In this
particular story, the rise from dirt-poor roots to extraordinary success is
hardest on Mooney, because once his wife’s career takes flight—thanks to years
of hard work by both members of the couple—Mooney becomes superfluous in ways he
never expected. This insightful take on the rags-to-riches formula that’s
usually employed for biopics about music stars is just one of several
commendable aspects of Coal Miner’s
Daughter. Even though the film is quite ordinary in many ways, from the
unavoidably predictable storyline to the way the title character is all but
sanctified, delicate nuances of character and regional identity give Coal Miner’s Daughter an appealing sense
of authenticity.
Opening in rural Kentucky circa the late 1940s, the picture
introduces Loretta as the dutiful 15-year-old daughter of Ted Webb (played by
real-life rock singer Levon Helm), a hardworking coal miner and father of eight
kids. Life in the tiny mountain village of Butcher Hollow is hard, so when
fast-talking World War II veteran Oliver “Mooney” Lynn woos Loretta with
dancing and romance, she’s quickly swept off her feet. Marriage and pregnancy
follow. Eventually, Mooney relocates his growing family to the city so he can
find work, and he encourages Loretta to develop her singing talents by
performing at honky-tonks. Though she misses her people in Butcher Hollow,
Loretta realizes she’s got a gift for entertaining audiences, and things start
falling into place. Mooney finances a recording session that produces a hit single,
Loretta gets invited to perform on the Grand Ole Opry, and reigning
country-music queen Patsy Cline (Beverly D’Angelo) becomes Loretta’s best
friend, mentor, and touring partner. Despite exhaustion, marital tensions, and
tragedies, Lynn soldiers on to become a chart-topping superstar.
As written by
Tom Rickman (from Lynn’s best-selling autobiography) and directed by Michael
Apted, a versatile Brit who has spent his career toggling between documentaries
and fiction films, Coal Miner’s Daughter
feels heartfelt from start to finish. The scenes in Kentucky are especially
good, with beautifully constructed accents and costumes and sets used to convey
you-are-there verisimilitude. Although material depicting life on the road is pedestrian,
the combination of D’Angelo’s sass and Spacek’s fortitude amply demonstrates the
indignities and sacrifices that women had to make for music careers in the
’50s. Jones also delivers one of his liveliest performances, mostly suppressing
his natural surliness in favor of good-ol’-boy warmth. Underscoring all of
this, of course, is the fact that Lynn’s early life really did unfold like a
country song—she’s the real deal, and the same can be said of this film about
her amazing journey.
Coal Miner’s Daughter: GROOVY
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