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Wednesday, 15 June 2011

Review #127: 'The Devil and Daniel Johnston' (2005)

The struggle of an artist battling against his own demons has long been played out in both the movies and reality. Musicians such as Ray Charles, Johnny Cash and Jim Morrison fought against drug and alcohol addiction that led to their lives being played out on screen. They suffered for choices they made. Daniel Johnston, a cult figure and genius songwriter, battled with mental illness for most of his life. His art both benefited and suffered because of his affliction. But Johnston was helpless of his fate. His mental instability deepened as his fame grew, and it's all captured in detail in this wonderful documentary.

Daniel Johnston was always a strange child, growing up with a seemingly obsessive compulsion for art, and later for music. He was vastly creative, inspired and individual in his output. When he decided that he wanted to be a musician and be famous, he produced an album on tape, advertised his work to producers and writers, and blew everyone away. Always influenced by his muse - a girl he fell in love with at college and never saw again - his songs were tortured and heart-rendering, yet joyous and upbeat. But his increasingly unstable mental state put his career on hold. After indulging in marijuana and LSD, he was submitted to a mental hospital after attacking his friend with a lead pipe. And so began Daniel Johnston's tragic public decline, as he alienated himself from his family and friends, and intensified his obsession with God, and ultimately, the Devil.

I had never heard of Daniel Johnston's music before this film. His music is not for everyone's taste - his voice is high-pitched and unbalanced, and his techniques non-conformal and almost old-school - but no-one could deny the tortured genius behind it. Seeing him go on stage for the first time, all skinny and uncomfortable, glancing nervously at the camera every now and then, there was something awe-inspiring about him. It makes it all the heart-breaking to see him now, bloated and old, physically damaged by his mental illness. And yet his thirst for art remains.

There are plenty of bio-documentaries and music documentaries out there that are capable of blowing you away (Gimme Shelter (1970) and The Last Waltz (1978) come immediately to mind), but although this is a great music documentary, it just as brilliant as a serious portrayal of the devastating effects of mental illness. As Johnston had the nack of recording practically everything he did on tape, we get to witness almost first hand his life and breakdown. There are early tapes of him arguing with his mother, and phone calls asking him to wash the graffiti he did on the Statue of Liberty. We also hear troubled calls from his loved ones and friends, and hear the effect it was having on them. One friend states that the troubled genius's of the past, like Van Gogh, are fascinating to read about and amplifies their God-like status. But no-one living has ever had to live with them, and witness it unfold before their eyes. An excellent documentary that really gets to the heart of it's subject. And I'll definitely be hunting down Daniel Johnston's work.


Directed by: Jeff Feuerzeig
Starring: Daniel Johnston
Country: USA

Rating: *****

Tom Gillespie




The Devil and Daniel Johnston (2005) on IMDb

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