
Robert
Altman's Nashville
(1975/Paramount/ABC/Criterion Blu-ray w/DVD)
Picture:
B+ & C+ Sound: B & C+ Extras: B+ Film: A
It
is too easily forgotten how great and important a filmmaker Robert
Altman was, making films about something every time out, gaining more
and more power as a filmmaker and artist and being on the cutting
edge as much as Scorsese, Coppola, Arthur Penn, Stanley Kubrick and
the other great filmmakers of the time. Starting with M*A*S*H
in 1970, Altman had made seven remarkable films that had his style,
personal stamp and mature ideas on them, some dramas and some
satires. Robert
Altman's Nashville
(1975) would be one of the cinema's greatest satires since Kubrick's
Dr.
Strangelove
(1965) and also make some of the most important statements about the
United States ever put to film along with Polanski's Chinatown
(1974)
in what many would call the peak of his filmmaking career.
Using
the capital of country music (at the time) as a microcosm of show
business (Altman likened it to Hollywood's vapid side in many ways,
possibly all vapid to him) and the American Dream decimated with
smiles on the faces of those doing the destroying (how prolific!) the
complex screenplay by Joan Tewkesbury follows no less than 24
characters (on the implied verge of the upcoming Bi-Centennial the
year after this film as the country celebrates in the fresh shadow of
Watergate and Vietnam) and their lives that will eventually intersect
(think of it as Crash
for grown adults with an edge and important points) as they all try
to make it in the town of the title.
It
is an amazing script, directed with joyful, energetic delirium
without getting stupid or silly, but the points made are actually
more relevant than ever as an election and political campaign draped
in symbols of Americana and trying to hijack the excitement of the
town go on at the same time. We also have one of the greatest cast
films of this epic scale ever made including Lily Tomlin is a gospel
singer who has to deal with a stressful career, Ned Beatty as her
husband and take care of deaf relatives, Karen Black and Ronee
Blakely are star singers, Keith Carradine is an up and coming
singer/songwriter (in the Kris Kristofferson mode), Geraldine Chaplin
as a BBC reporter trying to cover the madness, Henry Gibson is
brilliant as an anti-George Jones country megastar singer still
popular after all these years and other great roles with great
performances by Barbara Baxley, Allen Garfield, Robert DoQui, Bert
Remsen, Barbara Harris, Michael Murphy, Scott Glenn, Jeff Goldblum,
Shelley Duvall, Keenan Wynn and turns by Julie Christie and Elliott
Gould as themselves.
Nashville
is not just another film or epic, but a pure cinematic experience
that has been lost in the shuffle of empty hits and a regressive
Hollywood, so it is great to have it finally getting the
respect it deserves as the cinematic masterwork it is and thanks to
Criterion, all serious film, fans will get to see and appreciate it
in ways it deserves to be. Don't miss one of the most important
reissues of the year!
The
1080p 2.35 X 1 digital High Definition image transfer of this film
shot in real 35mm anamorphic Panavision starts on purpose with a
scratchy black and white image of the Paramount logo of the time,
then becomes a parody of the fast talking TV ads in color that used
to sell hit compilations on vinyl records at the time and actually
does a pretty good job of it. Then the regular, natural image that
we will see kicks in and we see how deep and palpable a scope view of
this world becomes thanks to the approach by Altman and Director
of Photography Paul Lohmann (Coffy,
High
Anxiety,
Time
After Time,
Mommy
Dearest)
not only using the very widescreen frame to its fullest extent, but
giving it a look that feels intimate no matter how distant we are.
We are partly eavesdroppers in a slightly quirky exaggerated way,
overlapping dialogue and all, not to mention the world of music
portrayed.
The
film has looked shabby for decades on video, et al, but this new 2K
transfer for the Blu-ray from a 35mm interpositive properly
represents the MetroColor enhanced by TVC's Chemtone process and is
pretty consistent throughout including fine depth intended. Finally,
you can see how great looking the film is, was intended to be and how
thoroughly it works visually. The great character of capturing the
slight gaudiness of the town, the music (before Country got worse
sometime in the 1980s!) and the many people. The anamorphically
enhanced DVD version is not bad, but cannot being to capture the
sometimes demo-quality image the Blu-ray delivers.
The
DTS-HD MA (Master Audio) 5.1 lossless mix is also a nice restoration
and upgrade from the previously weak video releases, the film was
issued in 4-track magnetic sound with traveling dialogue and sound
effects in most of the better 35mm showings, but a few actually got
to show off the more complex 8-track discrete sound mix and the 5.1
gets to draw on some of that here to fine effect. Criterion and
Paramount skipped a 7.1 mix as the sound is towards the front
channels, but it shows how ahead of the curve Altman was on movie
sound for a time and the result offers a character with narrative
ties most of the smash, bang, loud 5.1, 7.1 and 11.1 mixes we have
now lack in their pure genericness, much like their generic scripts.
The lossy Dolby Digital 5.1 on the DVD is not bad, but a little
weaker than expected and no match for the DTS-MA on the Blu-ray.
Extras
in this Dual Format slipcase packaging include a DigiPak holding 3
discs (one Blu-ray, 2 DVD) with a nicely illustrated
booklet on the film including informative text and an essay by the
great Molly Haskell (America Sings) worth reading after seeing the
film, then both formats add a great vintage feature length audio
commentary track by Altman from 2000, archival Behind The Scenes
footage, a new Making Of documentary on the film, the Original
Theatrical Trailer, three archival interviews with Altman and audio
demos of Carradine rehearsing his songs for the film with and for
Altman set to stills.
-
Nicholas Sheffo