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Orgo-Life the new way to the future Advertising by AdpathwayIt’s a daunting task to add a new music biopic to the award-winning roster of films, such as Bohemian Rhapsody and Rocketman, or zany parodies like Walk Hard: The Dewey Cox Story—all of which are referenced in Alex Ross Perry’s Pavements. As the title suggests, Perry delves into the history of the popular 90s indie rock band and its continued popularity after the band reunited in the 2020s.
The result blurs the line between being a documentary and a biopic, allowing the movie to honour the hard-to-pin-down band in the best way possible. At the start, Perry establishes the fact that not only is Pavement back together as a band, but he is directing an off-kilter theatrical experience titled Slanted! Enchanted! A Pavement Musical and a pretend biopic of the band called Range Life.
Throughout Pavements, footage from the latter plays, serving as a form of meta-comedy. Actor Joe Keery, best known for his work in Stranger Things, embraces the challenge of transforming into Pavement’s lead singer, Stephen Malkmus. Whether he’s working with a vocal coach or gushing about how fans thought he was actually the musician, Keery goes full throttle in “committing to the bit,” as the kids say, while poking fun of die-hard method actors in the process. By the end, you just might even feel convinced you’re watching the reincarnated version or that Malkmus was a little too inspired by The Substance.
As those who appear in the film point out, Pavement, at the time of their rise, was a band for the weirdos who didn’t feel connected to Nirvana or Oasis. Because of this, Perry feels just as tapped into the modern alternative culture and the New York scene, whether it’s including actress Zoe Lister-Jones (Beau Is Afraid) in the musical’s prominent role or having comedian Tim Heidecker appear as a manager-type in Range Life.
If we’re using Heidecker’s comedic style as an example, he serves as a fitting comparison for the style of Pavements. This is most prevalent, probably during the scenes at a museum pop-up in Pavement’s honour, which also launched during the filming process. A nod to Malkmus’ time as a security guard at The Whitney, the artefacts on display tell a story that is both fact and fiction, intended for you to gain your own interpretation. Sure, some of Malkmus’ notebook pages were there, but then so were some of the band members’ dirty clothes, somehow preserved and never washed from the infamous mud-throwing incident of Lollapalooza 1995.
The show is featured through archival footage and comedically recreated as Keery has mud thrown at him while in front of a green screen. Because of this, the musical and clips from Pavement’s various reunion shows around the globe, there is no shortage of performances either, providing an understanding of the band’s work and mindset across various albums. (There are even a few Beavis and Butthead clips, edited to feel like you’ve taken a time machine back to the band’s youthful era.)
Perry’s Pavements could have alienated those unfamiliar with the titular band, but thankfully, it doesn’t. Instead, it allows them to learn, love, and be included in the jokes, which is really all you can ask for from a music documentary.
★★★★
On MUBI from July 11th / Joe Keery, Zoe Lister-Jones, Jason Schwartzman / Dir: Alex Ross Perry / MUBI / 15
This review was previously posted as part of our coverage of the 2024 London Film Festival
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Tags: Alex Ross Perry, BFI London Film Festival, cinema, jason schwartzman, Joe Keery, LFF2024, MUBI, Pavements, review, vod, zoe lister jones