The Hamilton Spectator

Doc zeroes in on transforma­tive power of rock and baseball

- GREG KOT

A new Pearl Jam documentar­y, “Let’s Play Two! Pearl Jam Live at Wrigley,” tries to be two movies at once. It wants to be a concert film documentin­g the Seattle quintet’s two-night stand at Chicago’s Wrigley Field in 2016, and it also aspires to chronicle the crush Eddie Vedder has on his favourite team.

“It’s like stepping into Oz,” Vedder says of Wrigley, and director Danny Clinch — a trusted accomplice who has made two previous concert films with the band — intermingl­es the staging of the concert and the Chicago Cubs’ run to the World Series title. In Clinch’s telling, Pearl Jam and the Cubs are part of the same extended family of dedicated fans. Just as the Cubs were the lovable losers who finally won it all, Pearl Jam is portrayed as the onceobscur­e band that now improbably fills legendary baseball stadiums.

The premise might strike some viewers as more than a little disingenuo­us. Pearl Jam’s fame was nearly instant after signing with a major label out of the box in the early ’90s and some Cubs fans may view Vedder as just another celebrity coattail rider at the team’s victory parade. Pearl Jam diehards who come to the movie expecting to see blow-by-blow coverage of a big musical weekend in the band’s career may be disappoint­ed to find the movie is also a minihistor­y of the Cubs, brimming with baseball highlights and commentary.

All valid concerns, except one: Vedder is indeed a long-suffering Cubs diehard. As a kid who spent part of his childhood in Evanston, he would hang out in the right field bleachers to watch his favourite player, Jose Cardenal, chase fly balls. In 2013, in the middle of one of the worst Cubs seasons ever, Pearl Jam played Wrigley for the first time and the concert was interrupte­d by a massive storm. When Pearl Jam finally retook the stage just before midnight to resume the show, Vedder said, “Ernie Banks likes to say, ‘Let’s play two.’ I say, ‘Let’s play until 2 (a.m.).’”

He then invited Banks onstage from the wings, and the Cubs Hall of Famer gave the show his blessing: “I appreciate all of you coming to my house tonight.”

By the time the band returned to Wrigley last year, Banks had died, but the song he urged Vedder to write — “All the Way” — had become something of a North Side anthem.

Pearl Jam is portrayed as a people’s band, and members of its audience and Cubs fans are given as much or more screen time than several band members. Joe Shanahan, owner of Metro, where Pearl Jam played its first Chicago concert in 1991, chimes in with a mixture of Cubs and Pearl Jam lore. Beth Murphy, the wife of Jim Murphy, who founded the Wrigleyvil­le bar Murphy’s Bleachers across from the park 37 years ago, turns into the movie’s most memorable talking head, particular­ly when she’s reminiscin­g about playing hide-andseek with her brother in the nearlyempt­y Cubs bleachers as a kid.

The concert footage adds little to what we already know about Pearl Jam: a reliable heritage act with a boatload of anthems perfect for entertaini­ng a stadium full of lighterwav­ing revelers on a starlit summer night.

The most revelatory footage comes from a low-key band rehearsal on Murphy’s rooftop while L trains roll past. When the quintet detours into “Dirty Work,” an old Steely Dan tune, Stone Gossard praises the chord changes, which brings an incredulou­s response from Vedder before his bandmates dissolve in laughter.

It’s fascinatin­g to watch the band interact in a loose, intimate setting, and the film could’ve used more such behind-the-scenes insights into what makes Pearl Jam tick.

Instead, the music becomes a backdrop to the love story of the famous rock singer and his long-suffering team. As the drive to the World Series and the Wrigley concerts intersect in September 2016, Vedder calls it the “legendary culminatio­n of all our devotions.” Yes, he really does talk like that — he’s a true believer in the transforma­tive power of rock and of baseball, and he’s a boy again leaping into people’s arms whenever he’s on stage or on the field. As an affirmatio­n of one famous fan’s dedication, “Let’s Play Two” works well enough. As a Pearl Jam documentar­y, not so much.

“Let’s Play Two! Pearl Jam Live at Wrigley,” rated 14A, is playing at Cineplex Cinemas Ancaster and SilverCity Burlington Chicago Tribune

 ?? NUCCIO DINUZZO, CHICAGO TRIBUNE ?? Eddie Vedder of Pearl Jam, a serious lifelong Cubs fan, performs at Chicago’s Wrigley Field on Saturday, Aug. 20, 2016.
NUCCIO DINUZZO, CHICAGO TRIBUNE Eddie Vedder of Pearl Jam, a serious lifelong Cubs fan, performs at Chicago’s Wrigley Field on Saturday, Aug. 20, 2016.

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