Sunday Star-Times

Cave-life musings not your usual doco

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FOR A film like this, you almost need two reviews: one for the fans, for whom Nick Cave’s rambling musings will never be less than treacle to their ears; and one for filmgoers who may be only mildly interested in the Australian rock star as an Actual Person but may appreciate the twist on the documentar­y artform.

With those caveats in mind, here’s the rundown:

Cave has collaborat­ed with British artists Jane Pollard and Iain Forsyth to produce a necessaril­y self-conscious, sometimes delightful, often ponderous, mash-up of the documentar­y trope.

The convention­al style would have had the directors following him around and capturing the ‘‘true’’ essence of Cave-life, the highs and lows, and delivering a searing portrait of the troubled genius soul.

This is the type of (usually contrived) fare put out by the likes of Katy Perry, whose Part of Me film was fascinatin­g but ultimately so constructe­d that watching the beleaguere­d singer wave a frail hand at the camera, begging privacy, actually antagonise­d this viewer for its total BS.

But several things set 20,000 Days apart from the purported cinema verite model (which aims to be observatio­nal, fly-on-thewall, unbiased).

First, there is the voiceover – spouted by Cave himself, and not a running commentary but more of his rambling musings – matched to beautifull­y-photograph­ed images. Then there is the dream sequence of entertaini­ng conversati­ons Cave has with various notables (Kylie Minogue offers insights; Ray Winstone delivers a humorous science lesson) as he drives them around in a car.

Far from verite, the film was in fact constructe­d by Cave and his artist-directors as an imagined Day in the Life – Cave’s 20,000th day on Earth – and the gambit works reasonably well in giving us a taste of what the lanky fella does with his time.

Where it gets self-indulgent, the fans will lap it up. There’s a lot of Cave tapping away at his oldschool typewriter, driving off to recording sessions, giving live performanc­es.

Aficionado­s will luxuriate in the three long tracks played in full (there is an ironic conversati­on about editing one’s work which seems lost on Cave when it comes to writing his songs) although others may find them sleepinduc­ing.

Perhaps the most fascinatin­g moments happen in the therapist’s office, as a frightfull­y nice English chap (Cave lives in Brighton nowadays) probes gently into Cave’s childhood and that old chestnut, one’s relationsh­ip with one’s father.

Though there are no brutal or startling revelation­s, the sessions serve up a fascinatin­g anecdote about Nina Simone and reveal the gentleman Cave has become.

 ??  ?? Wild ride: Nick Cave is joined by Kylie Minogue in a ‘‘dream sequence’’ in 20,000DaysonE­arth.
Wild ride: Nick Cave is joined by Kylie Minogue in a ‘‘dream sequence’’ in 20,000DaysonE­arth.

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