Seeing as how delivering great sets at the
Woodstock festival in 1969 helped lift many artists into the pop-music
stratosphere, it was probably inevitable that at least one of the musicians who
made a strong impression in the documentary-film record of the festival, Woodstock (1970), would earn a movie all
his own. Hence Mad Dogs & Englishmen,
a lengthy nonfiction movie about the tour of the same name headlined by English
blues/rock howler Joe Cocker, whose rendition of the Beatles’ “With a Little
Help From My Friends” was a shining moment in Woodstock. Had the folks behind Mad
Dogs & Englishmen concentrated solely on Cocker’s musical performances,
the picture might have been consistently interesting. Yet the filmmakers
unwisely emulated the style of rock docs including D.A. Pennebaker’s famous Bob
Dlyan study, Don’t Look Back (1967),
juxtaposing personal and private moments. Put bluntly, Joe Cocker is no Bob
Dylan in terms of charisma and prismatic identity. Quite to the contrary,
Cocker is rather dull to watch in the offstage bits, coming across as a
pleasant but thoroughly average bloke who simply happens to have an exciting job.
The filmmakers also rely too heavily on generic footage of fans and groupies,
none of whom do or say anything remarkable on camera. At least the bits of roadies
packing joints are amusing to watch.
Anyway, the performance scenes, which
should have been the focus, are fine, even though it’s anticlimactic when the
film proper concludes with, you guessed it, “With a Little Help From My
Friends.” Haven’t we seen that somewhere before? Along the way to “Friends,” Cocker
and his ferocious band—led by guitarist, pianist, vocalist, and arranger Leon
Russell, one of the mad geniuses of classic rock—rip through “Delta Lady” and
“Feelin’ Alright,” among other tunes. In quieter passages, Cocker and his mates
play rehearsal versions of “Darling Be Home Soon” and “Will the Circle Be
Unbroken”; additionally, Cocker’s backup singers entertain themselves during a
plane ride by harmonizing on the Carpenters’ “Superstar.” Shot on grainy 16mm
stock and weighed down by a muddy audio track, Mad Dogs & Englishmen is undoubtedly a treasure for fans of the
singular Cocker, whose much-satirized physical gyrations are front and center
throughout performance scenes. For non-devotees, Mad Dogs & Englishmen ranks with the least essential rock films
of the ’70s.
Mad
Dogs & Englishmen: FUNKY
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