The Columbus Dispatch

U2 documentar­y marred by an oddball American

- Mark Kennedy

David Letterman joins Bono and The Edge in a new streaming documentar­y about U2 and one obvious question soon jumps out: What exactly is David Letterman doing here?

The droll, bushy-bearded American comedian is an odd choice to be master of ceremonies for this Disney+ project, unbalancin­g everything, even the title, “Bono & The Edge: A Sort of Homecoming, with Dave Letterman.”

Director Morgan Neville does a fabulous job using new interviews – including brilliant insights by musician Glen Hansard and producer Jimmy Iovine – and melding them with old performanc­es as he explores the band’s origins, song creations, highs and lows. But he’s torn about whether this is a travel show or a music documentar­y and neither work well.

The film’s spine is a concert by Bono and The Edge at the Ambassador Theatre in Dublin, Ireland, where they unveil some of the ways they’ve stripped down and reworked their catalogue for the new acoustic-led album “Songs of Surrender.”

But Letterman not only distracts, he gets in the way. We watch him wander around Dublin shopping with his clueless, oddball sense of humor, as if the show was about him. “I’m interested in a wheel of cheese. I’ve never purchased a wheel of cheese,” he says.

There’s even a weird sequence in which Bono is reduced to drawing a map of Ireland for his guest and unpacking the complex history of Irish-english animus. “Who do I dislike in this?” asks Letterman. The answer is Letterman.

The documentar­y does a masterful job of giving context to U2’s rise, the social, religious and cultural changes taking place in the late 1970s and ’80s in Dublin, or as Bono says “as Ireland moves from black and white into color.”

There are insights – some small, like that drummer Larry Mullen Jr.’s nickname growing up was “The Jam Jar,” and some big, as when Bono reveals tensions within the band regarding his activism.

But then there’s Letterman popping up again – visiting polar swimmers or stopping by the recording studio, offering no real insight. Bono and The Edge even write him a goodbye song. Letterman is empty-handed.

Watching the documentar­y you start to realize how crucial The Edge is, and even get to listen to him sing a few songs and tell the story of how he came up with “Sunday Bloody Sunday” while delivering the riff on a guitar. Bono brings up how key his bandmate is, in a sweet way, live in concert.

“The thing I don’t like about Edge is that he doesn’t need me. He could be doing all of this – writing, singing, performing, playing, producing – on his own. But he doesn’t,” Bono says.

“Because it’s not as much fun,” The Edge replies.

The only thing that ruins this special chemistry is the film’s third wheel – the American with the wheel of cheese.

 ?? FILE/GREG ALLEN/INVISION/AP ?? From left, Adam Clayton, Bono, The Edge and Larry Mullen Jr., of the Irish band U2, received the Kennedy Center Honors last year. The band’s latest release, “Songs Of Surrender,” is a collection of 40 re-recorded and reimagined songs from across the band’s catalog.
FILE/GREG ALLEN/INVISION/AP From left, Adam Clayton, Bono, The Edge and Larry Mullen Jr., of the Irish band U2, received the Kennedy Center Honors last year. The band’s latest release, “Songs Of Surrender,” is a collection of 40 re-recorded and reimagined songs from across the band’s catalog.

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