Regina Leader-Post

On the run with Bruce Springstee­n

Western Stars explores musician’s relationsh­ip with love, loss and regret

- MARK DANIELL

Bruce Springstee­n had one goal in mind when he decided to step behind the camera to co-direct Western Stars — which is a live recreation of the album of the same name — he wanted to forge a deeper connection between him and his fans.

“It’s a continuati­on of the conversati­on we’ve been having since I was a young man,” the 20-time Grammy winner says.

The documentar­y, which is a concert film combined with the singer’s musings on life, premièred last month at the Toronto Internatio­nal Film Festival.

Following his 2016 memoir, Born to Run, and his sold-out Broadway shows in 2017 and 2018, Springstee­n, who recently turned 70, says both the film and the album of the same name wrap up a trilogy of sorts. It’s a storyline that has found him still wrestling with love, loss, doubt, loneliness and regret.

“The older you get, the heavier the baggage becomes that you haven’t sorted through,” Springstee­n says in the film. “So you run. And I’ve done a lot of that kind of running.”

Western Stars is co-directed by Thom Zimny, who worked with the rocker on The Promise documentar­y and shot Springstee­n on Broadway for Netflix. It started out as just a straight concert film, but Springstee­n found himself writing passages to bridge the songs as a way to cinematica­lly reframe his 19th studio album.

“The filming really deepened the emotional content of the record,” Springstee­n said in Toronto. “If you listen to the record, it’s its own experience, but making the film allowed me to tell a story that I hadn’t directly told before. It’s hinted at over the years in a lot of my work, and if you read the book I wrote or saw some of the play ... but filming just deepens the emotional content of that music in a way I hope will provide some entertainm­ent and inspiratio­n and insight to my fans.”

In the lead up to the record’s release in June, the Oscar winner knew he wasn’t going to tour to support it. Still, he wanted a way to communicat­e the album’s themes to his fans.

“I said, ‘We’ll just shoot the stuff live from start to finish,’ which we did and then we figured we’ll do some interviews (with) people talking about how great I am to work with and,” Springstee­n continues breaking into a laugh, “what a pleasure and honour it was ... the usual s--t. We started to do some of that, and it didn’t quite feel right.”

So he hunkered down one evening and wrote a script that threads the performanc­es together.

“I needed to draw people into the songs as they came up on screen ... It ties up some of the philosophi­cal threads I’ve been working on my whole life, really, since I was a kid. I say at the beginning of the picture, ‘There are two sides of the American character. There’s the solitary side and the side that yearns for connection and community.’ I’ve spent a lifetime trying to get from one to the other ... how to reconcile those two things. It might be all those three things — the book, the play, the film — are summing up my truth to this point.”

Shot in a 100-year-old barn on his New Jersey estate with a 30-piece orchestra, the 13 intimate tracks, plus a bonus cover of Glen Campbell’s Rhinestone Cowboy, capture faded movie stars, stuntmen, drifters, aging characters and people running from circumstan­ces beyond their control.

As he segues from one song to another, Springstee­n peels back a layer of his personalit­y and ushers you into his innermost world. It also offers a glimpse into his relationsh­ip with his wife of 28 years, Patti Scialfa, with a rare look at some of the couple’s home videos added into the mix. Speaking over wide panoramic shots Zimny captured in California, he talks about how his marriage to Scialfa helped him to scrub the destructiv­e parts of his personalit­y.

“I was in my early 30s and I started to wonder, ‘Where is my everything?’ The band was great, we were playing great, but there wasn’t a lot else,” he said following the première. “That’s when I started to do some analysis. I saw that I was just stonewalli­ng ... I didn’t have any place to go, but I needed to go someplace else very badly.

“I think if you want to thrive in life and continue to be creative both in your personal life and work life, you need to make these leaps of consciousn­ess that will help you to move to the next place. And what allows you to move to the next place is, in the end, love. Love is what gets us through ... how do I find my way there? That’s what the film’s about.”

 ?? MONICA SCHIPPER/GETTY IMAGES ?? The documentar­y Western Stars features old home videos of singer-songwriter Bruce Springstee­n and his wife Patti Scialfa, centre, who are seen with their daughter Jessica Rae Springstee­n at a recent screening of the film. The couple has been married for 28 years.
MONICA SCHIPPER/GETTY IMAGES The documentar­y Western Stars features old home videos of singer-songwriter Bruce Springstee­n and his wife Patti Scialfa, centre, who are seen with their daughter Jessica Rae Springstee­n at a recent screening of the film. The couple has been married for 28 years.

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