Walk
the Line (2005)
Rated R
Starring: Joaquin Phoenix, Reese Witherspoon,
and Ginnifer Goodwin
Rating:

out
of

|
When I was a young boy, one
of the first albums that ever caught my interest was "Live at Folsom Prison" by Johnny Cash. Along with albums
by The Beatles and Elvis Presley that I'd "borrowed" from my
parents' collection, that one spent a lot of time on my turntable. The
images in the lyrics were extremely vivid and the songs were mesmerizing.
I've never been a country music fan, but there was always something about
Johnny Cash that made me like him as well as his music. I never knew much
about the man behind the music until I saw Walk the Line, the 2005 biopic
that attempts to tell the tale of Cash's rise from a young musician to
his recording of "Live at Folsom Prison" in 1968. As a boy, John R. Cash lived
on a farm with his parents and older brother, Jack. He stayed up late
listening to the radio, dreaming of being a musician,
while his brother read and did homework. "Why are you so good?",
J.R. asks his brother as it's apparent that Johnny is viewed as the lesser
of the two boys by his father. When Jack is killed in an accident, it's
also apparent that his father wishes that J.R. had been taken and not Jack.
After leaving home for a stint in the Air Force, J.R. (Joaquin Phoenix)
buys a guitar and starts writing songs. When he returns, he marries Vivian
(Ginnifer Goodwin), a woman he barely knows and starts a family.
After discovering a local recording
studio in town, he asks the owner -- who happens to be Sam Phillips,
the man who first recorded Elvis Presley
-- how he can get a record deal. Phillips grants an audition and Cash and
his band -- "two mechanics who can hardly play" -- sing a gospel
song rather badly. Phillips stops them and asks them if they have anything
else that might actually sell. Cash begins singing one of the songs he
wrote in the Air Force, "Folsom Prison Blues," and his band,
who don't know the song, improvise behind him. It gets him a deal and the
newly dubbed Johnny Cash begins touring with some of the day's greatest
rock 'n' rollers, including Jerry Lee Lewis, Elvis Presley and a woman
named June Carter (Resse Witherspoon), who would eventually become his
second wife.
Walk
the Line documents their romance as well as Cash's struggles with
drugs and his stardom. It spends a lot of time and energy making Cash seem
like a reckless drug addict hopelessly tormented by the fact that June
Carter won't marry him. Clocking in at two hours and sixteen minutes, the
movie could have been tightened up with fewer scenes of Cash as a drunk
or lying in a pool of sweat. I'm not asking the movie to sidestep the fact
that Cash was addicted to drugs and alcohol, it just could have been handled
in a less ham-fisted manner. That said, the performances are wonderfully
nuanced. Witherspoon, especially, is a delight as the tough but vulnerable
June Carter. The songs, which are actually sung by Witherspoon and Phoenix,
are well-done and never boring.
My main problem with Walk
the Line isn't the performances or the songs.
After the film, I came away not really getting a sense of why Cash is the
legend that he is today. The movie paints him as a drugged-out, lovesick
rock star who somehow managed to not lose everything he had when he was
down. Cash was much more than that and it's a shame that the movie doesn't
give him the credit for being more than just another near-tragedy. He deserves
better, but this is still a decent film. Wait for the DVD. Trivia: Joaquin
Phoenix performed all of the songs himself without being dubbed and
learned to play guitar from scratch. (Source: The
Internet Movie Database) |