A Poem is a Naked Person -- Film Review
A Poem is a Naked Person
Directed
by Les Blank
This is not a documentary despite the film's
pretensions. This is a video scrapbook
or an upscale home movie. The video
clips that have been strung together in this are pretty good quality. The camera crew that shot them was
excellent. The editing and the
conceptualization are amateurish, but each small bit is interesting in itself
and the music selections are outstanding.
This film, despite its many limitations, takes hold of you and doesn't
let go. It is carried strictly by the
power of the subject matter and the quality of the music -- and there is a lot
of music, and a great variety of music. All
the time I was watching the film I was trying to figure out when it was
shot. I recognized a brief cameo of Cass
Elliot, so I knew it had to be not later than the early 1970s. It was actually shot
by Les Blank in 1972-1974. (This is not
presented in the film. I had to look it
up.) Most of it was shot in Tulsa,
Oklahoma, maybe some of it in Louisiana, I'm not sure. This film is not a presentation of the
facts. It is a raw, informal portrait of
Leon Russell from his peak years as a singer and performer. The title of the film is a quote from Bob
Dylan's liner notes to his album Bringing
It All Back Home (1965).
There are a couple of things this film does well. The presentation of Leon Russell as a singer,
pianist, and performer, work. I was
impressed with what an excellent pianist he is.
There is a wedding scene where he plays Wagner's "Bridal
Chorus" from Lohengrin and
Mendelssohn's "Wedding March" unaccompanied on the piano. I believe they were his own arrangements very
sensitively performed. He has a very
commanding presence on stage. In front
of an audience he was comfortable and unquestionably in charge. I could also feel a hard, driving ambition in
him that was very disciplined and insistent on excellence. Off stage he was casual and relaxed. He seemed to tolerate bozos well and there
seemed to be a lot of them around him.
But when it came to music and performing before an audience, he took it
very seriously, and he must have been demanding of his band mates. The film did not make a point of this, but I
surmised it from the quality of the performances and his demeanor on
stage.
The film gives one a good feel for the culture of Oklahoma
and the various musical influences absorbed by Leon Russell from middle America
and the South. There is a shot of some
rollicking gospel in a black church, Sweet Mary Egan [Hattersley] on unaccompanied fiddle,
band member Charlie McCoy on harmonica, young Malissa Bates singing Hoyt Axton's
"Joy to the World" unaccompanied,
a very young Willie Nelson doing "Good Hearted Woman," some
native Americans in traditional dress dancing to their native drum music. The film is rich in the musical culture of
the American heartland.
One also gets a feel for the culture and temperament of the
people of Oklahoma: provincial, unsophisticated, simple and straight
ahead. There is a clip of a precision
parachute jumping competition, another of a controlled demolition of a building
in downtown Tulsa, another of a man in a small boat catching a quite large
catfish. Some things you probably
couldn't get away with today, like feeding a small chick to a boa constrictor
and watching him kill it and eat it before your eyes. The man who guzzles down a glass of beer and
then bites off the edge of the glass with his teeth and chews it up and
swallows it. That may represent the
culture and mentality of the people of Oklahoma, but Leon Russell is a couple
of pegs above that.
He is comfortable in that provincial backwater. It has molded him and shaped him and he has
incorporated its varied influences into his own style, and the people see him
as one of their own. But he is able to
move beyond that world that gave him birth.
He knows of a bigger world beyond the confines of Oklahoma and he wants
to be part of it and be successful in it.
While Leon Russell can fit in with those unvarnished yokels, he is not
really one of them. His mind, his taste,
his skill, and his ambition reach far beyond his roots, but he does not
repudiate his background, rather he embraces it and embodies it and forges from
it a very appealing, unique personal style.
The film does give you that much, although there is much more you will
wish it had done. It is an excellent and
interesting introduction to the music and the person of Leon Russell.