He
has some of the coolest credits ever, including Alien, Escape from New York, Red Dawn, Repo Man, and Wild at Heart. However, appearing as himself is a role he is
not so comfortable with. As a result,
Sophie Huber’s documentary treatment, Harry
Dean Stanton: Partly Fiction (trailer here) is a rather
impressionistic portrait that opens tomorrow in New York.
Stanton
is not the sort of fellow to sit down in front of a camera and commence
name-dropping, but Huber, his friend and colleague, knew that coming in. Foregoing the conventional approach, she
scored at least one coup. Up until now,
Stanton declined offers to record his traditional vocals and harmonica playing,
but she was able to capture many of his intimate performances. Frankly, that alone should constitute a
respectable cinematic legacy for Huber.
Indeed,
Stanton’s voice is truly mesmerizing on old time favorites like “Blue Bayou,” “Blue
Moon,” “Just a Closer Walk With Thee,” and the positively eerie closing
rendition of “Danny Boy.” Stanton’s
clear affinity for songs of loneliness and loss marries up perfectly with Huber’s
portrait of a haunted backwoods Zen master.
Unfortunately,
the scenes without music lack the same quiet power. At times, Huber merely tries of soak up the
ambiance of Stanton’s life, which gets a bit snoozy. The lack of any standard biographical
treatment also occasionally leads to frustration, as when Stanton off-handedly
comments on the unforgettable wildness of his years living with Jack Nicholson
and hanging with Marlon Brando. Right,
we can only imagine.
Huber
incorporates some commentary from Stanton’s famous friends, perhaps most
notably David Lynch, whom we see visiting with his chum. She also includes some film clips, relying
heavily on Wim Wenders’ Paris, Texas,
openly inviting audiences to conflate Stanton with his pseudo breakout role.
There
are few outright scoops in Fiction,
aside from Stanton’s disclosure (now widely remarked upon) that he once dated Rebecca
De Mornay, before she made Risky Business
and got involved with Hollywood’s favorite Scientologist. Who knew?
One gets a sense Stanton guards a treasure trove of such revelations,
but Huber never tries to dig them out.
Still, the film has a stylishly evocative look, thanks to
cinematographer Seamus MacGarvey’s striking black and white sequences.