After displaying a naturalistic screen presence
in his movie debut, Sydney Pollack’s romantic drama The Electric Horseman (1978), country singer Willie Nelson was
given a custom-made leading role in another romantic drama, Honeysuckle Rose, which Pollack produced
but did not direct. Once again, Nelson proved he was comfortable
on camera, though the role of an easygoing, pot-smoking troubadour did not
require him to stretch. The film surrounding Nelson is so frustrating that the
best thing to come out of this project was a classic song. “On the Road
Again” became a huge crossover hit, earning a Grammy award and an Oscar
nomination. Some scenes in Honeysuckle
Rose capture the joy of that tune, but those bits are almost always
tangential to the main plot, which is trite and unseemly. The movie also
suffers for the questionable casting of its two major female roles.
Nelson
plays Buck Bonham, a longhaired Texas singer-songwriter on the verge of
achieving national stardom after years of being a regional favorite. (Sound
familiar?) Buck is married to sexy blonde Viv (Dyan Cannon), a former singer
who gave up life on the road to raise Jamie (Joey Floyd), her son with Buck.
Now firmly entrenched in middle age, she’s lost her patience with Buck’s
endless declarations that “one of these days” he’ll slow down his touring to
spend more time on the Bonham’s sprawling Texas ranch. When Buck’s longtime
guitarist, Garland Ramsey (Slim Pickens), announces his retirement, Buck
scrambles for a replacement, and Viv unwisely suggests that Buck hire Garland’s
seductive 22-year-old daughter, Lily (Amy Irving). To absolutely no one’s
surprise, Buck and Lily become lovers on the road, causing friction in the
Bonham marriage and damaging Buck’s friendship with Garland.
There are maybe 80
minutes of real story in Honeysuckle Rose,
but the movie drags on for a full two hours. The bloat stems partially from
extended performance scenes, but also from such discursions as an endless
family-reunion scene and snippets of life on a tour bus. Director Jerry
Schtazberg shoots all this stuff beautifully, applying a photographer’s keen
eye to scenes that feel casual and spontaneous, but he can’t muster similar
creativity for romantic scenes. Nelson’s low-key vibe creates an inherent
energy deficiency, and the fact that neither Cannon nor Irving seem remotely
believable as Texans introduces falseness into a movie that otherwise boasts
plentiful authenticity. Nonetheless, Honeysuckle
Rose has its pleasures. Emmylou Harris shows up to sing a number with
Nelson, and it’s a treat to see Pickens playing a straight dramatic character. The scenes in which he and Nelson simulate
drunken revels are particularly enjoyable.
Honeysuckle
Rose: FUNKY
No comments:
Post a Comment