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Brian Wilson takes a ‘Road’ trip down memory lane

- Patrick Ryan

The Beach Boys frontman speaks frankly in the documentar­y “Long Promised Road.”

Brian Wilson is a man of very few words.

The Beach Boys icon is the subject of the new documentar­y “Long Promised Road,” which screened virtually for journalist­s Monday night ahead of its world premiere at the Tribeca Film Festival on Tuesday.

But the famously interview-shy Wilson, 78, opens up in his stoic, soft-spoken way throughout the 95-minute film, which centers on a road trip of sorts between the singer and Rolling Stone editor Jason Fine.

Fine, who has interviewe­d Wilson many times, drives around Los Angeles with Wilson revisiting the musician’s old haunts and listening to the Beach Boys. The two talk about tension within the band, the making of 1966’s “Pet Sounds” and unfinished album “Smile,” as well as the frontman’s mental health struggles.

“We love driving around and talking,” Fine said in a virtual news conference after the screening. “It’s just something we’ve done for a long time. We’ve spent a lot of time doing that together, so this was very natural in that way. And you know that feeling when you’re driving: There’s less pressure. Conversati­ons start, stop, you can listen to music. Things happen sort of naturally when you’re in that rhythm of the road.

“Brian has memories throughout the city, both in his songs and lyrics that he’s written, but also just in his own life,” Fine continued. “So driving around LA with Brian, you’re aware that this is someone who’s often viewed as a reclusive guy, but really, this is his town.”

“Road” director Brent Wilson (no relation to Brian) shot roughly 70 hours of Fine and Wilson driving. He also pulled from unseen archival footage, photos and home movies, including of Wilson sweetly fumbling his wedding vows with second wife Melinda Ledbetter.

In two of the film’s most devastatin­g moments, Wilson recalls his controllin­g relationsh­ip with psychologi­st Eugene Landy. The singer describes how Landy would make Wilson eat spaghetti off the floor and wouldn’t let him see his family as he struggled with his weight and drug and alcohol abuse.

Later in the film, Fine breaks the news to Wilson that former Beach Boys manager Jack Rieley died years earlier, in 2015. Wilson wipes tears from his eyes, saying the revelation “absolutely broke my heart.”

Wilson also was on hand for the news conference over Zoom. Asked why he decided to make the documentar­y, he simply offered, “I don’t know. I just made up my mind.”

Another journalist wondered why the legendary songwriter frequents Los

Angeles’ Beverly Glen Deli. His answer: “The waiters and the waitresses and the cook.”

Looking back at the Beach Boys’ ’60s heyday, Wilson cited Chuck Berry and the Rolling Stones as inspiratio­ns, and acknowledg­ed there was rivalry with the Beatles.

“Me and Mike (Love) were a little bit jealous of the Beatles because they took over the whole music scene,” Wilson said.

Throughout the doc, which is still seeking distributi­on, artists including Elton John, Bruce Springstee­n and Nick Jonas fete Wilson and his influence on popular music via talking-head interviews.

The Tribeca Film Festival officially kicked off Wednesday with in-person, outdoor screenings of “In the Heights” in neighborho­ods around New York, ahead of the movie musical’s theatrical release.

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