I âRECUPERATIâ di âCelluloidPortraitsâ - RECENSIONE - In DVD e Blu-RAYdal 24 Febbraio 2016 - PREVIEW in ENGLISH by SCOTT FOUNDAS (www.variety.com)
"Lennon gli scrive: 'Vieni a trovare Yoko e me. Noi ti accoglieremo a casa e parleremo di tutto. Puoi essere famoso e allo stesso tempo essere te stesso, fedele al tuo talento. Non c'è bisogno che tu ti venda'. Parole che avrebbero significato molto per Danny Collins giovane, che lo avrebbero costretto a fermarsi e riflettere. Fama, successo, soldi, va bene: ma la tua arte dov'è finita? PerchÊ bruciare tutto in fiumi di alcol e droga?... à molto saggio. à una buona idea ricordarti chi sei e rimanere fedele alla tua arte. E cosÏ io voglio ricordare John Lennon. Mi sarei inginocchiato davanti a lui, se l'avessi incontrato. Che genio...".
L'attore Al Pacino
(Danny Collins; USA 2014; Dramedy; 106'; Produz.: Big Indie Pictures/ShivHans Pictures; Distribuz.: Eagle Pictures)
Titolo in italiano: La canzone della vita - Danny Collins
Titolo in lingua originale:
Danny Collins
Anno di produzione:
2014
Anno di uscita:
2016
Regia: Dan Fogelman
Sceneggiatura:
Dan Fogelman
Cast: Al Pacino (Danny Collins) Annette Bening (Mary Sinclair) Bobby Cannavale (Tom Donnelly) Jennifer Garner (Samantha Leigh Donnelly) Christopher Plummer (Frank Grubman) Giselle Eisenberg (Hope Donnelly) Nick Offerman (Guy DeLoach) Josh Peck (Nicky Ernst) Katarina Cas (Sophie) Melissa Benoist (Jamie) Scott Lawrence (Dr. Ryan Kurtz) Brian Thomas Smith (Judd) Eric Lange (Dr. Silverman) Anne McDaniels (La bambola di Danny) Aarti Mann (Inferimiera Nikita) Cast completo
Cassandra Starr (Groupie)
Musica: Ryan Adams e Theodore Shapiro
Scenografia: Dan Bishop
Fotografia: Steve Yedlin
Montaggio: Julie Monroe
Makeup: Randi Mavestrand
Casting: Mindy Marin
Scheda film aggiornata al:
08 Dicembre 2021
Sinossi:
IN BREVE:
Una rock star ultra sessantenne non ha nessun desiderio, se non quello di godersi il tempo che gli rimane insieme alla sua giovane fidanzata. Un giorno trova una lettera che John Lennon scrisse per lui quando aveva diciannove anni. Questo ritrovamento lo porterĂ a riscoprire la passione per la musica e la creativitĂ e, soprattutto, sarĂ lo stimolo per mettersi in contatto con il figlio, ormai quarantenne, cosa che non aveva mai fatto prima. Durante il suo viaggio capiterĂ in un piccolo hotel del New Jersey, dove stringerĂ amicizia con la direttrice della struttura.
SYNOPSIS:
An aging rock star decides to change his life when he discovers a 40-year old letter written to him by John Lennon.
Inspired by a true story, Al Pacino stars as aging 1970s rocker Danny Collins, who can't give up his hard-living ways. But when his manager (Christopher Plummer) uncovers a 40 year-old undelivered letter written to him by John Lennon, he decides to change course and embarks on a heartfelt journey to rediscover his family, find true love and begin a second act.
Commento critico (a cura di PATRIZIA FERRETTI)
âE ora come la mettiamo Danny?â
Lo sceneggiatore di film Pixar, Cars - Motori ruggenti e Cars 2, debuttava allora (2015) alla regia con Danny Collins, ovvero, La canzone della vita. Il film, come sottoscrive la didascalia, si ispira ad una storia vera, premurandosi di aggiungere âpiĂš o menoâ. I toni, difatti, sono quelli leggeri della commedia, mentre il cuore punta al dramma. In effetti, âla canzone della vitaâ del titolo italiano non suona di certo una melodia tutta zucchero e miele, piuttosto sniffa droga e trinca alcool, allâinsegna del tirare a campare sulla cresta del successo cavalcato decenni prima, quando scriveva di suo pugno le proprie canzoni mentre ora gli mettono nel piatto quello che deve cantare. Insomma, per una rockstar di fama diventa difficile convivere con sĂŠ stessi quando la creativitĂ non fa piĂš parte del pacchetto. A parafrasare il personaggio reale di cui si parla in questo âsgangheratoâ
ritratto cinematografico, vale a dire il cantante folk Steve Tilston, è qui un certo Danny Collins, di cui si fa carico per intero, prendere o lasciare, un piÚ che convincente Al Pacino. Beh, inutile dire che un personaggio del genere sia pane per i suoi denti. Un tipo con il dramma nel cuore, la battuta pronta, gli eccessi come sostentamento alternativo quotidiano, logorroico e comico, o, ridicolo che dir si voglia. Insomma, la rockstar attempata tipo, con una teenager come moglie dopo tre matrimoni falliti alle spalle, e in calendario come tournee, concerti fotocopiabili che hanno stufato pure lui. Al suo fianco il manager di sempre, amico e fedele confidente, il Frank di Chistopher Plummer.
Tutto inizia con unâintervista giovanile, quando il nostro protagonista, ancora timido e spaurito, confessa che John Lennon rappresenta il top della sua ispirazione musicale. Il punto di partenza prima che vi si affianchi quella incredibile lettera
scritta da John Lennon in persona ed inviata al suo indirizzo, per quanto, per diverse vicissitudini, non lâabbia mai ricevuta: non prima, decenni dopo, che il suo manager la ripeschi casualmente tra i preziosi reperti di antiquariato e gliene faccia dono in uno dei suoi mega compleanni, in cui lâunica a non essere invitata è la sorpresa. Quando tutto è ormai scontato, non câè da divertirsi un granchĂŠ, e lâunico con cui confidarsi senza veli è proprio il suo manager Frank/Plummer: uno specchio della veritĂ in cui rimirarsi, senza illusori e mendaci paraventi. Come il nostro Danny/Pacino ritrovi la via maestra, spronato da quella lettera di Lennon, non è uno spettacolo sensazionale, ma è comunque il corpo centrale della umanissima storia di una stella che ha brillato di luce propria prima di imboccare, eccesso, dopo eccesso, la china del declino. Su questo percorso, oltre al sempre fedele alleato Frak/Plummer, fanno
man mano la loro comparsa: la direttrice dellâHilton Hotel Mary Sinclair di Annette Bening; un figlio (il Tom Donnelly di Bobby Cannavale) ritrovato in etĂ adulta con la sua famiglia, tra cui una nipotina ed un altro in arrivo, mai incontrati prima e lasciati al loro destino; sensi di colpa a grappolo e fuori tempo massimo, per quanto camuffati da una maschera ibridata di spavaldo pseudo umorismo, velato di malinconica solitudine.
E, proprio quando si sfiora il melodramma, ecco che opportunamente si devia, sfumando prontamente verso un finale sospeso - sia pure chiarissimo nelle sue coordinate pilota - mentre sui titoli di coda si affaccia il reale artista di cui tratta il film, giusto in tempo utile per confermare lâimportanza di quella lettera per la svolta che lo ha salvato dal baratro. Alla fine, è proprio âla canzone della vitaâ ad essere, se non la piĂš interessante, almeno la piĂš autentica
e genuina protagonista.
Secondo commento critico (a cura di SCOTT FOUNDAS, www.variety.com)
trailer ufficiale (V.O.):
AL PACINO AND HIS ONSCREEN ALTER EGO SEEK CAREER REHABILITATION IN DAN FOGELMAN'S FAMILIAR BUT AFFECTING MUSIC-BIZ REDEMPTION DRAMA.
With his tufts of gravity-defying, shoe-polish hair and burnt-orange tan, Al Pacino has been sporting the look of a glammer-than-thou aging rock star for so long now that itâs only fitting heâs finally gotten around to playing one â which he does, exceedingly well, in âDanny Collins.â For his directorial debut, screenwriter Dan Fogelman has crafted a familiar late-in-life redemption narrative, made surprisingly palatable by Pacinoâs winning comic bravado, a superb supporting cast, and currents of real feeling that cut through the expected bromides about the emptiness of fortune and fame. Though itâs unlikely to score quite the same home run with the Social Security crowd as the Fogelman-scripted âLast Vegasâ did ($134
million worldwide), this March 20 opener should leave the staff of new distributor Bleecker Street humming a happy tune.
This is the second time in a year that Pacino has played a celebrated star in the throes of an identity crisis. Only, where âThe Humblingâsâ Simon Axler was a Broadway legend starting to lose his lines (and his grip on reality), Danny Collins is a music-world icon who long ago lost his artistic integrity â a subject which, given the general trajectory of Pacinoâs movie career over the last decade (from grade-Z action fare like âRighteous Killâ and â88 Minutesâ to the Adam Sandler debacle âJack and Jillâ), makes this new role seem even closer to home. The Collins we first meet in Fogelmanâs film â in a brief, âAlmost Famousâ-ish prologue set in 1971 â is an earnest young singer-songwriter in the Bob Dylan/Jim Croce mold (played by Eric Schneider,
a reasonable doppelganger for the ââPanic in Needle Parkâ-era Pacino). By the time we jump ahead to the present day, heâs become a kitsch pop icon with a signature sing-along anthem (âHey, Baby Dollâ), a third volume of greatest hits on the charts, and a young bimbo fiancee (Katarina Cas) on his arm. In the span of 40-odd years, Bob Dylan has become Neil Diamond.
Itâs around this time that Dannyâs longtime (and long-suffering) manager (the redoubtable Christopher Plummer) gifts him with a most unexpected piece of fan mail: a letter from Dannyâs idol, John Lennon, penned in 1971 but lost for decades in the hands of a nefarious journalist (arenât they all?) and a private collector. The message is a predictable âstay true to yourselfâ encouragement, along with an invitation for Danny to phone the ex-Beatle for a private chat. And it is this letter, âDanny Collinsâ asks us (not
entirely convincingly) to believe, that sinks our hero into an existential funk, wondering how his life â and career â might have fared differently if heâd received Lennonâs letter in a more timely fashion.
In fact, there was a real Danny Collins, or rather a real Steve Tilston, a British folk singer who, in 2005, received just such a letter, written by Lennon in response to an interview the 20-year-old Tilston had given to a now-defunct music magazine in which he worried that commercial success might corrupt his artistry. But as an onscreen text at the start of Fogelmanâs film states, âDanny Collinsâ is only âkind of based on a true story a little bit,â which means itâs safe to assume that the real Tilston (whoâs credited as a consultant here) did not subsequently set off on a cross-country odyssey to meet the adult son (Bobby Cannavale) he fathered with a
groupie back in the day, or hole himself up in a suburban New Jersey Hilton while trying to get back in touch with his songwriting muse.
But âDanny Collinsâ is a movie after all, and one that on its own warm, fuzzy terms offers a few modest surprises. With his basic setup in place, Fogelman could have easily let things coast along on heart-tugging autopilot, with all the expected sermonizing about how what really matters in life are the things money canât buy. But Fogelman is smarter than that and so are his characters, especially Cannavaleâs Tom and his no-nonsense wife, Samantha (Jennifer Garner), who initially resist Dannyâs dramatic intrusion (complete with football-field-sized tour bus) into their placid suburban lives, but soon realize that there are certain advantages to having a rock star in the family â like jumping to the front of the line for an elite Manhattan school specializing
in the needs of children like their ADHD-afflicted daughter, Hope (Giselle Eisenberg).
Cannavale, who can sometimes overdo his Italian-American working-stiff affect, is terrific as a man whoâs spent so much energy trying to become the man his own father never was that itâs left him, at 40, as weary and worn-down as someone twice his age. But even Pacino is dialed way back from the scenery-pulverizing histrionics that have typified his post-âScent of a Womanâ career. Not unlike Collins himself, the actor has veered dangerously close to self-parody on more than one occasion with his outsized gestures and bellowing line readings, but he seemed renewed as a performer in his recent collaborations with Barry Levinson (âYou Donât Know Jackâ and âThe Humblingâ) and in David Gordon Greenâs âManglehorn,â and he does again here, especially in the scenes with Cannavale, which go beyond the expected âyou were never there for meâ mawkishness.
Sometimes, the two characters donât say much to each other at all, but we know exactly what each of them is feeling. Watching Pacino in this role, you can see that he knows what it means to feel soulless and depleted as both an artist and a man, and he isnât afraid to share that with an audience.
Of course, you donât got to a movie like âDanny Collinsâ expecting to see one of those bleak, dark-underbelly-of-the-music-biz movies like âPaydayâ or âCrazy Heartâ or âInside Llewyn Davis,â and thatâs certainly not what Fogelman sets out to deliver. But beneath the sitcom cutesiness and boldfaced sentimentality, the film manages to keep just enough reality coursing through to stay grounded. Even then, Fogelman doesnât trust his characters (or his audience) quite enough to bypass such creaky contrivances as a potentially fatal illness for one character and, for Danny himself, a drug-and-alcohol addiction that
the movie flicks on and off like a light switch whenever itâs convenient. And while Fogelman has written some nice, tart repartee for Pacino and Annette Bening (as a fastidious hotel manager in whom Danny sees a potentially âage-appropriateâ love interest), the actress is around just enough to make you wish there were more of her.
Fogelman also fouls off whatâs supposed to be the movieâs big climax, when Danny takes the stage for an intimate cabaret performance at which heâs supposed to unveil his first original compositions in years. The way the scene plays out, though, feels like a lazy narrative cheat, especially given a pop landscape in which older artists of all stripes lust after the very sort of back-to-basics career reboot that renders Danny inexplicably paralyzed with fear. A movie with no less a father of musical reinvention than Don Was (producer of lauded âcomebackâ albums for everyone
from Bonnie Raitt to, yes, Neil Diamond) as its in-house music guru ought to have known better.
Still, Was has co-written (with Ryan Adams) a lovely original ballad, âDonât Look Down,â that serves as Dannyâs proverbial redemption song â and, unlike most such movie songs, sounds like it could have actually been written by the character. Elsewhere, Fogelman cycles through nine of Lennonâs post-Beatles recordings (including âImagine,â which was at one point meant to be this filmâs title), most of them used judiciously and without turning the soundtrack into an overly nostalgic baby-boomer hit parade.