Stumbling
to Salvation
by
Chris Knipp
Crazy Heart is a simple but emotionally resonant movie
about a 57-year-old alcoholic country singer whose career is on the
skids. There's not much to the story, but not much is necessary with
Jeff Bridges as the singer, Bad Blake; Colin Farrell as Tommy Sweet,
his handsome acolyte, now a big country music star; Maggie Gyllenhaal
as Jean Craddock, a small-time New Mexico journalist with a four-year-old
boy and lousy luck with men, who falls for Bad; and Robert Duvall as
Wayne, the singer's clean-and-sober bartender-protector.
Bridges, Gyllenhaal and Farrell have never been better, and Duvall
is always pure gold. This movie is Bridges' chance to give a master
class in acting, and he does not disappoint for a minute, but he's not
alone in the spotlight, and the depth of support he gets is what makes
Crazy Heart worth watching.
A
lifelong musician and many-talented artist (painting, photography, ceramics)
whose thespian preeminence in Hollywood has yet to win him an Oscar,
Jeff Bridges inhabits the songs he sings on screen as convincingly and
seamlessly as he fits into the shambles of a life and mess of a body
that is the film's protagonist. This musical integrity is important
because Bad Blake is one of those disintegrating performers whose art
has not faltered, though his life has. The songs he sings are his own,
and when he's on stage, he's alive. The rest of the time he's lying,
deceiving, or numbing out. A great line is when he's asked by Jean where
his songs come from and he replies simply, "Life, unfortunately."
First time
director Scott Cooper has said this movie tells "Merle Haggard's
story and Kris Kristofferson's and Waylon Jennings'. As Bad Blake, Jeff
moves like Waylon, he has Merle Haggard's songwriting ability and Kris
Kristofferson's charisma." Of course Bridges looks a lot like Kristofferson,
and Bad Blake puts his hard times into his felt, authentic compositions
as Waylon and Merle did. The songs are composed by T-Bone Burnett, and
are fine; more authenticity is added through other songs such as Townes
Van Zandt's "If I Needed You" and Waylon Jennings' "Are
You Sure Hank Done It This Way." Burnett composed the songs with
the late Stephen Bruton; and the closing ballad, "The Losing Kind,"
with Ryan Bingham. Farrell also does his own singing, and his Irishness
merges fairly convincingly into a slick country style. Just as Bad Blake
is the mentor of Tommy Sweet, in real life Robert Duvall has become
a mentor of the actor-writer-director, so his presence anchors the film
and presides over it. Bridges knew of the movie but held off from committing
to it till he learned his friend Burnett was in. Cooper is a musician
and life-long fan of country music. So this is a project that must have
felt right, ultimately, for all concerned.
Bridges'
Bad Blake is so authentically blousy and pathetic he's hard to look
at sometimes. He's always drunk, and at an opening gig at a Pueblo,
Colorado bowling rink, throws up in a back alley between songs, while
the young pickup band he's saddled with has to fill in. In Santa Fe,
Jean shows up to do an interview, and a May-December romance develops
as Bad woos Jean against her better judgment and plies her little boy
with homemade pancakes (the boy is hungry for a man in his life and
Bad oozes charm, when he's conscious). Gyllenhaal, who played a character
struggling with addiction and recovery herself in SherryBaby,
captures the character of a woman warring inside with loneliness and
need. Her scenes with Bridges are central to the movie, and the chemistry
is strong between them.
Blake hasn't
written songs for some years, but when he meets up with Tommy prior
to a date opening for him to an audience of 12,000 in Denver, Tommy
begs him to write some for him. In this way the screenplay manages to
steer a course, perhaps a bit too easily, between success and failure.
Clearly Bad Blake is still working, even if it's at lousy venues, and
to prove it he's always on the phone to a hard-nosed manager (James
Keane) who's finding him the best gigs he can. This eventually leads
to a contract to compose songs for an album with Tommy.
Crazy
Heart, which was written by Cooper from the eponymous novel by
Thomas Cobb, is perhaps a bit schematic about the up-down-up trajectory
of the talented loser, but it manages to be pretty realistic about the
degeneration that is terminal alcoholism. Here, however, it's not a
slide into hell like Mike Figgis' Leaving Las Vegas. Though
only by the skin of his teeth, and with multiple ailments a car crash
reveals, Bad is surviving. So when the moment comes and he hits bottom,
he still has the strength to straighten out. Maybe the fast-forward
finale is a bit too upbeat, but the memory the movie leaves is, of course,
of Bridges with a bottle, a guitar, and a sad sweet song, and of some
of the year's best movie acting.
©2010 Chris Knipp
CineScene