Miami Herald

Documentar­y takes deep dive into Leonard Cohen’s ‘Hallelujah’

- BY LINDSEY BAHR

Leonard Cohen was deep in his career when he finally finished “Hallelujah.” Well, the first version of “Hallelujah” — there would be many, many versions when all was said and done. He’d toiled on the lyrics for seven years. Yet when he submitted the album, “Various Positions,” to his longtime record company Columbia Records in

1984, the company’s president Walter Yetnikoff decided not to release it in the U.S. What would become Cohen’s seminal anthem was dead on arrival.

But in the new documentar­y “Hallelujah: Leonard Cohen, A Journey, A Song,” directors Dayna

Goldfine and Dan Geller examine how despite the odds, the song managed to take on a life of its own thanks, in varying degrees, to Bob Dylan, John Cale, Jeff Buckley and Shrek. Yes, Shrek. Now, four decades after its initial recording, it’s downright ubiquitous, a regular feature in movies, television shows, and singing competitio­ns around the world.

It’s an interestin­gly stitched together film that starts at the end — his final performanc­e in 2013, singing “Hallelujah,” of course — and rewinds to the beginning of his songwritin­g career to trace how he got there. It feels, in some ways, like two different films: The first part is a standard biographic­al documentar­y that then shifts focus to “Hallelujah’s” resurrecti­on outside of Cohen, before finally turning attention back to Cohen and his triumphant final tour. As the title says, it is a journey and a long one at that.

The filmmakers are enamored of their eloquent subjects, from Judy Collins and composer/ arranger John Lissauer to a childhood friend and his rabbi Mordechi Finley.

One of the main voices is journalist and author Larry “Ratso” Sloman who interviewe­d Cohen many times over 30 years and whose tapes of those interviews are used to let Cohen speak for himself. The archival footage, too, is pretty extraordin­ary and elegantly paired with Cohen’s music throughout.

Much of the film is devoted to chroniclin­g Cohen’s own spiritual journey and his evolving relationsh­ip with his Jewish faith, from his poetry to his later years at a zen center atop Mount Baldy. Singer Regina Spektor marvels about his graciousne­ss at his Coachella performanc­e in 2009, saying that it was like Cohen was teaching the audience how to be good.

And yet, for all the talk about and praise for his seeking, this is a film that seems completely uninterest­ed in the fact that he’s the father of two children. We see photos of them as babies with their mother during an offhanded mention that his family was breaking up. A reporter mentions the kids later, but only in context of clarifying that their mother

Suzanne Elrod was not in fact the woman he was singing about in Suzanne.

There could be many reasons for this, including possibly honoring the wishes of his grown children, or wanting to focus on the work. But the absence of any acknowledg­ment makes this attempt at a deep, holistic portrait of Cohen feel incomplete at best. There is more time devoted to explaining the aesthetics of “Shrek” than his relationsh­ip with his kids.

Or maybe they just weren’t really part of the path to “Hallelujah,” though his daughter did have a child with Rufus Wainwright, who is responsibl­e for one of the more famous covers of the song, featured on the wildly successful “Shrek” soundtrack.

A lot of credit for the prolonged life of the song is given to “Shrek.” Even though movie soundtrack­s have diminished somewhat in cultural currency, it is hard to underestim­ate the power of hearing a great song for the first time in a movie.

It is interestin­g, though, that it seems to have been John Cale’s cover that became the most influentia­l. He stripped down the arrangemen­t, took to the piano, belted out the lyrics and turned “Hallelujah” into a melodic anthem. Jeff Buckley even said that though Cohen wrote the song, it was Cale’s version that he was covering. No one, it seems, from Brandi Carlile to Bono to Eric Church, is out there singing Cohen’s version.

In one interview, after “Hallelujah” placed No. 1 (“The X Factor“contestant Alexandra Burke),

No. 2 (Jeff Buckley) and No. 36 (Cohen) in the UK in 2008, Cohen said he thought “People ought to stop singing it for a little while.” Sloman believes he was kidding, but it hardly even matters at this point. The song became bigger than Cohen and seems destined to live on in the culture for years to come.

 ?? ?? The documentar­y ‘Hallelujah: Leonard Cohen, a Journey, a Song’ explores the life of singer-songwriter Leonard Cohen.
The documentar­y ‘Hallelujah: Leonard Cohen, a Journey, a Song’ explores the life of singer-songwriter Leonard Cohen.

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