Dean Clough

September 13, 2023

Portico Darwin: Stop Making Sense in IMAX Mini Review

TODAY'S RAMBLINGS

<2 Minute Read
Flag of Ukraine.jpg

First, a rave worthy of the Boomer that I am, and now this.  Let's turn to a 40 year-old concert movie, albeit arguably the best of them all.

Monday night, I joined Byron Browne IV and Louise Lederhosen (fellow Thievery Corporation board members - so to speak - on Saturday) in attending one of the simultaneous North American screenings in IMAX of Talking Heads' legendary and certainly Diamond Certified concert film, Stop Making Sense.  It's been completely re-mastered from top-to-bottom for its anniversary, so of course I had to go. 
PXL_20230912_005642430.MP.jpg

There were assorted hangers-on with us:  the up-and-coming chip salesman Devin Singh, PhD., as well as the elusive Bruce Rosenberg.  The latter was shod in Scarpa Mojitos, so at least there was that.   

The movie itself?  Well, it's hard for me to judge, as I've seen it at least 20 times, and listened to it 100s more.  So, yeah, I like Demme's film, but it's the band's incendiary music throughout that makes it.  Duh.   

Beyond that, witnessing this cinematic masterwork in the ginormous IMAX format - a big feature of which is its equally massive sound - bordered on being a revelation, despite my familiarity with the source material.  I absolutely saw and heard things I had not previously, and that alone made the $30 ticket very much worth it.

More so because I was wise enough to grab a single when I got my ticket - vs. attempting to sit with my chums.  Smart move, as I had probably one of the best seats in the house (the Cinemark Century Daly City).  It was stunning.  And fucking big
talk1.jpg

Indeed the whole thing was a thrill.  But what was super wacky was what went down after the film. 

As I mentioned, it was simulcast, and after the credits rolled, out came Spike Lee for a short - and live - Q&A with the original band members, from Toronto.  From left, that's Clough family wedding attendee David Byrne, guitarist Jerry Harrison, drummer Chris Frantz, and bassist Tina Weymouth.  And the Spike-meister - donning an extraordinary Louis Vuitton black leather jacket, BTW.
talkshow.jpg

Suffice to say the session with Spike was informative.  And awkward AF.  Because as you may know, some of these people really don't like each other.  And while the band supposedly has made peace, with Mr. Byrne offering his stilted mea culpa on 60 Minutes (of all places!), the tension that remains is obvious.  If you'd like to know more, you really should read Chris Frantz's very good memoir of himself and the band, Remain in Love (he's been married to bandmate Tina Weymouth since around the band's inception, in the late 1970s).
 
Newcomers?  It might be too late for you to catch an IMAX screening, but you can stream the movie and its soundtrack from probably every service.  I will say if you've somehow never seen this film and/or listened to its soundtrack . . . you're quite odd in my world and also really missing out.
talk2.jpg

Is that elitist?  God, I hope so.

FROM THE UNWASHED MASSES

Thank you for reading this newsletter.  

KLUF

No.  No.  No.  Oh, OK, but I've played this before, and it's not Stop Making SenseHere are Talking Heads with their better live album, The Name of This Band is Talking Heads. 

I play it here to illustrate the arrogance of David Byrne - he insisted the band add a second bass player (Busta Jones) to augment the amazing Tina Weymouth on the Remain in Light tour (captured on disc 2 of TNOTBITH).  I still love this record, and it offers a career retrospective that Stop Making Sense can't.
band.jpeg

Note to my wedding pal Dave Byrne:  Tina Weymouth needs no help playing bass in Talking Heads or anywhere.
tina.jpeg

About Dean Clough