Kuwait Times

‘Nico, 1988’: Movie for muse who couldn’t shake her fame

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At her 1960s peak, the German vocalist Nico was “Lou Reed’s femme fatale,” a glamorous superstar whose name was plastered across one of the most influentia­l records of all time. But her days mixing with Andy Warhol and alternativ­e US rockers The Velvet Undergroun­d are far behind the drugaddled forty-something we meet in Susanna Nicchiarel­li’s upcoming feature “Nico, 1988.” The singer, embodied in a pitch-perfect performanc­e by the Danish actress and one-time Eurovision contestant Trine Dyrholm, is addicted to heroin and washed up, yet stubbornly content that she has remained true to herself.

It is a movie not so much about Nico’s fleeting brush with global celebrity as it is about the panache with which she dealt with the frustratio­n at not being able to leave it behind. “The Velvet Undergroun­d and Nico,” the 1967 collaborat­ion on which she sung lead on just three songs, has ranked as high as 13 on Rolling Stone’s list of the 500 Greatest Albums of All Time.

It was seen as the progenitor of much of the alternativ­e rock that followed in the 1970s-and the album and associated tours were pretty much the only thing that interested the music press about Nico. Nicchiarel­li, a fan of Nico’s lesser-known later music, became intrigued by the singer after listening to her dry, laconic interview answers about her supposed heyday. “She did much more interestin­g things afterwards, as a solo artist, and I found it very funny the way she treated journalist­s and the way she took out all the myths from the 60s,” Nicchiarel­li told AFP.

Struggling with demons

“My favorite answer, which I put in the first interview in the movie, is when they say, ‘That must’ve been the best period of your life.’ And she says, ‘Well, we took a lot of LSD.’ That fascinated me and made me like her a lot.” “Nico, 1988” is a poignant and at times hilarious chronicle of the performer’s last tour of Europe before her death from a heart attack on the Mediterran­ean island of Ibiza in the summer of that year. Leading a solitary existence in Manchester, northern England, her career and personal life are on the ropes, and a new manager (John Gordon Sinclair) convinces her to hit the road again. Approachin­g 50 and struggling with her demons, she is distracted by the neverendin­g quest to score another hit and yearns to rebuild a relationsh­ip with the son of whom she lost custody (Sandor Funtek).

Her voice meanders out of tune as she shambles on stage, her behavior erratic and tone unguarded, while her legs are covered in puncture marks from needles and unsightly bruises. Nico-Christa Paffgen to her few friends-suffered poverty and hunger growing up in West Berlin and shared in the national sense of shame that accompanie­d defeat in World War II, even though she was just seven when it ended. Her father had been a German soldier, but whenever she met Jewish people as an adult she would pretend that he had been a brave resistance fighter.

Past glories

“That wasn’t true and I find that very touching, the way she made up that story. What I think is interestin­g is that she died a year before the end of the Cold War,” Nicchiarel­li said. “So she didn’t even have time to see the end of it. She didn’t see her country reunited at the end of the Cold War. And I liked the idea of telling that part of her life, the final part of her life, because I think it was the best part of her life.” Nicchiarel­li’s thesis is that, even to this day, the singer is regularly done the injustice of being mentioned mostly in associatio­n with the “famous men she slept with.”

Warhol, a leading figure in the pop art movement, once said that Nico “became a fat junkie and disappeare­d,” and Nicchiarel­li’s third feature is nothing if not a 93-minute refutation of this notion.

Although Nico’s commercial successes were well behind her in her final years, the filmmaker sees her as almost the polar opposite of the faded star reveling in past glories, lamenting vanished beauty. “The whole thing gave me the possibilit­y to turn around the cliches about Nico-her life in the final part and then the relationsh­ip with her son and her relationsh­ip with history, her European identity, her German identity,” Nichiarell­i told AFP.

“All these elements were much more interestin­g for me than the things they usually care about in a biopic-being famous or not famous, successful or not successful-which somehow didn’t seem to be the major interest in Nico’s life.” “Nico, 1988” is being rolled out in select US theaters during August. — AFP

 ??  ?? In this file photo Danish actress Trine Dyrholm poses upon arrival to attend the awards ceremony of the 66th Berlinale, Europe’s first major film festival of the year, in Berlin. — AFP
In this file photo Danish actress Trine Dyrholm poses upon arrival to attend the awards ceremony of the 66th Berlinale, Europe’s first major film festival of the year, in Berlin. — AFP

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