Type and hit ENTER

Commonly used tags...

Brighton Festival Brighton Fringe Brighton Pride British Sea Power Cinecity Lewes Psychedelic Festival Locally Sourced Lost & Found Love Supreme Festival Mutations Festival Nick Cave Poets Vs MCs Politics Rag'n'Bone Man Record Store Day Save Our Venues Six Of The Best Source Virgins Streets Of Brighton Street Source Tattoos The Great Escape Tru Thoughts Unsung Heroes
  • Home
  • News
  • Previews
  • Reviews
  • Features
  • Food
  • Tickets
  • Contact
  • Contribute
  • Advertise
  • Home
  • News
  • Previews
  • Reviews
  • Features
  • Food
  • Tickets
  • Contact
    • Contact
    • Contribute
    • Advertise
Features

ICW: Gary Mulholland

Apr 1, 2010
-
Posted by SOURCE Writers

James Kendall: After a life writing about music it must have been a bit stressful making the leap to films, even if it was rock’n’roll movies.

Garry Mulholland: It was such a joy to sit down and watch movies, even bad movies. And quite honestly it’s easier writing about film than it is music – you can refer to actual things that happen. With a record you have to decide what the story is, you have to decide what it all means. I don’t think I realised how difficult writing about music was having only done it.

JK: But there must have been a load of bad movies in a genre best called a mixed bag. Music films can date pretty badly.

GM: Purple Rain I’d absolutely adored. I loved Prince but I hadn’t seen it since it came out. I sat down to watch it excitedly to discover it’s one of the worst films ever. I could not believe the level of misogyny. I think I was so blown away by Prince at the time that if I was noticing it I was putting it out of my head.

JK: We still have the Miley Cyrus and Jonas Brothers types of artists who are already very visual, or even televisual, but on the whole it seems like a genre that’s dying out a bit.

GM: It is dying out for the reason that there haven’t been too many successful rock movies and after a while film companies have worked out that it’s really hard to pull them off. Now it falls into two categories. Firstly, every band now has a documentary on their DVD or CD – apparently its fascinating to walk around behind a band with a handheld camera while they go on tour and make crap jokes about Spinal Tap. And then there’s big blockbuster things like I Walk The Line – dead rock stars and endless themes of cinema redemption.

JK: There must be some bands who suit making movies while they’re still alive though.

GM: It’s hard to get away from the Rolling Stones, in terms that Performance and Gimme Shelter are outrageously good films of two completely different types. And in those two films there’s a vision of everything that is dark and wrong about rock. The Who have come out of it well. Tommy is kinda silly but stood up better than I thought. Quadrophenia is fantastic and The Kids Are Alright shows how much more exciting rock bands used to be. It’s essentially and hour and a half worth of clips and you can imagine how entertaining an hour and a half worth of clips of the Keiser Chiefs would be.

JK: Without his movies Elvis could have been a much more powerful rock’n’roll star. You could say they almost killed his career.

GM: You could say that but he is an extraordinary 20th century story – the king that has too much. This dream career that Elvis was meant to have where he didn’t go into the army and just made tough rock’n’roll records would have meant that Elvis ended up as Gene Vincent or something. The bad movies are vital to the myth. It’s a terrible and sad story but it’s a better story than “he made great records”. It makes the 68 Comeback Special a far more emotional thing.

GARRY’S BEST ROCK’N’ROLL MOVIES

Privilege
“An apocalyptic vision of everything bad popular culture could be used for in your worst nightmares.”

Expresso Bongo
“A hilariously savage and cynical late 50s musical about the utter idiocy of rock’n’roll.”

Easy Rider
“It’s not about people playing guitars but it’s the best film about what people felt rock’n’roll meant in the 60s.”

Performance
“The British mirror of Easy Rider – the whole idea of Mick Jagger and gangsters is inspired.”

Stardust
“David Essex as the most unpleasant human being in film history and his demise from rock god to dead man.”

FYI
BOOK: Popcorn: Fifty Years of Rock ‘n’ Roll Movies is out now
WEB: garrymulholland.com
ON BLACK SABBATH: tinyurl.com/GMsabbath

Apr 1, 2010
Email
SOURCE Writers
Sometimes an article is a bit of a team effort, and those are tagged SOURCE Writers. If you’d like to be part of that team, hit the Contact link at the top and get your work on this website.
← PREVIOUS POST
Club Review: Latin Fever
NEXT POST →
The Hornblower Brothers Interview
Mailing List

Recent Posts
  • Brighton Psych Fest 2025 Review
    Sep 26, 2025

    The second Brighton Psych Fest was a beauty as we got down with Getdown Services as the evening sunlight glowed through the Concorde Stained Glass.

  • David Devant & His Spirit Wife, Friday 12th December
    Sep 23, 2025

    One of Brighton's greatest live bands returns for a pre-Xmas homecoming party.

  • Nick Cave To Play Exclusive Brighton Show Next Summer
    Sep 15, 2025

    Nick Cave returns to Brighton next Summer for an exclusive show with The Bad Seeds in Preston Park.

  • Death Comes to Pemberley Review
    Sep 3, 2025

    Set six years after the marriage of Elizabeth to Mr Darcy, a murder on their estate takes this story into thriller territory.

  • Betty Boo, Sunday 23rd November
    Sep 1, 2025

    The legendary Betty Boo is going on her first ever solo UK tour and you can catch her at The Green Door Store in November.

  • Mutations Festival 2025 Line Up Announcement
    Aug 28, 2025

    FORM are treating us to a Bonfire Weekend full of warm goodness, bangers and fireworks!

  • Pride And Prejudice Review
    Aug 27, 2025

    A beautifully realised adaptation of one of Jane Austen’s best loved books: giving us a grounded, real and hilarious retelling in perfect balance.

  • Suddenly Last Summer Preview
    Aug 26, 2025

    A stunning version of a lesser known Tennessee Williams play, by the brilliant Conor Baum Company. Don’t miss it.

Website developed in Brighton by Infobo
Copyright © Brighton Source 2009-2023
ICW: Gary Mulholland - Brighton Source