There but for Fortune » pa

Directed by Ken Bowser (www.philochsthemovie.com).
Released, January 2011, IFC Center, New York, NY
Premiered at the Woodstock Film Festival, Woodstock NY, 2010.

Original source: The Cultural Worker

Documentarian Ken Bowser walked up the aisle to the front of the IFC
Center in Greenwich Village for the premiere of ‘Phil Ochs: There But
for Fortune’ and explained that this film was some twenty years in the
making. Twenty years for a documentary about a folksinger of a time that
now seems far into the past, one who never lived to know of his place in
the annals of topical music. Citing that Ochs’ brief life and briefer
still career fell far short of the popular acclaim he struggled for,
Bowser reminded the audience that, “it’s important that we who love Phil
Ochs and understand his relevance let others know”. It was never
supposed to be a closed society of the initiated, so spread the
news---all the news that’s fit to sing. The protest singer’s vibrancy in
performance, the visceral stir in his voice and the earnest plead on his
face are back. The music’s depth, the urgency of the day and the living
movements that Ochs was so central to are visible for all to see.
Leaning awkwardly over a microphone while cradling his Gibson 6-string,
James Dean haircut spilling over his forehead, cocked eyebrow revealing
sardonic wit while the mouth produces an earnest portal for songs of
pride and revolution, Ochs erupts onto the screen, something of a
celluloid hero. Within the cinema that was once the legendary Waverly
Theatre—a site frequented by Phil in the ‘60s, walking distance from his
Bleeker Street apartment—it was easy to feel transported. And necessary.
These times, too, need Phil Ochs.

At least partially erased from popular memory, Ochs is recalled today in
an awkward hush. But wasn’t that a time? The singer didn’t just burst
upon the early ‘60s folk scene intact--he was crafted out of pure
determination and idealism. The product of a challenging, to say the
least, childhood (Ochs’ sister Sonny and brother Michael both attest to
their manic-depressive father and coldly disconnected mother), young
Phil tended to be a loner who idolized film stars and fostered a
burning, secret desire for fame. “The psychosis of the Eisenhower era”,
as record producer Van Dyke Parks described it, implanted in Ochs’ the
conflict that was to mark the years of protest to come. Deeply
patriotic, the teenage Ochs began to understand something of the
injustice in his midst and he began to see beyond the surface. In
college while studying for a career as a journalist, Ochs befriended
folksinger Jim Glover who introduced him to the music of Woody Guthrie
and the Weavers; his writings took a notable turn to the left. And after
years of study on clarinet, Ochs obtained his first guitar, winning it
from Glover in a bet when he wagered that Kennedy would beat Nixon in
the ’60 election. Ochs never retreated.

The writing of topical songs came easily---they flowed at a blurring
rate and offered up-to-the-moment social commentary. Phil noted that
“every newspaper headline is a song” and before long his performances in
Greenwich Village nightspots led to a major record contract and a
national tour. The film offers a look into the tumultuous relationship
he shared with another stalwart of the Village scene, Bob Dylan. While
they were friends as young men, Dylan’s star shined considerably
brighter than Ochs and as he rose to new heights, Ochs always felt at
least a step behind. The rivalry haunted him. Still, Ochs’ impact was
deeply touched by the activists who soon felt forsaken by Dylan.
Cultural critic Christopher Hitchens, among the notable talking heads
who offer wonderful insights, stated that “There was a difference
between those who listened to Dylan and those who even knew who Phil
was. Anyone could like Dylan”.

Eluded by wider popular acclaim, he staunchly maintained an immersion in
protest music even as he graduated beyond its standard fair of singer
and guitar. By his third studio album, Ochs’ transition was not into the
realm of folk-rock--as his peers had moved into--but to an expansive,
concept-driven format that made full use of orchestration and a variety
of genre. String quartets, honky-tonk piano, woodwinds and electronic
music provided a sweeping soundscape for Phil’s resounding tenor.
Seemingly always aware of, yet in battle with, the tragic destiny of
mental illness that would later claim him, Ochs fueled his passion with
alcohol and work. But the brilliance of his music was never enough to
satisfy the burning restlessness within the man or his conflicted
self-image, equal parts self-important and shattered.

‘Phil Ochs: There But for Fortune’ offers powerful insights into the
choice songwriter of in-the-know progressives. The film is a whirlwind
tour through his music, his politics and his personal demons, with
stopping points which include skillfully edited performance and
interview footage, news reels and rare photographs. First person
remembrances are provided by Ochs’ family as well as fellow folkies Pete
Seeger, Joan Baez, Dave Van Ronk, Jim Glover, Judy Henske, and Peter
Yarrow (the elusive Dylan was, as Bowser described, unavailable for
interviewing). Overall, the film is a fascinating view into the urgency
of the times, the movement culture, and the folksong community’s
response to Civil Rights, Vietnam, labor strife, and the murders of the
Kennedys, Medgar Evars and Martin Luther King. Ochs was inflamed with
activism and willingly thrust himself into the street heat---this is
where he differed from the rest! Other important historic segments in
the film are the interviews of Yippie founders Paul Krasner, Ed Sanders
(of the Fugs) and, via archival footage, Abbie Hoffman. Hearing the
personal recollections of the debacle of the 1968 Chicago Democratic
Convention protest, along with footage of the police riot and ensuing
despair, was riveting. Tom Hayden, never far from his radical roots,
again offered moving commentary. The assaults by the Chicago police, the
loss of an anti-war presidential candidate, and the dissolution of the
activists base, post-’68, had a terrific impact on the already wavering
Ochs. Sanders said that Phil saw the protestors as, influenced by 1930s
radicalism, part of “a united front against the war”. Once it was
broken, he began to state that he’d died in Chicago along with
democracy---or at least the movement.

While Ochs later years are painful to observe, the power of the songs
stands strong. It is almost unfathomable that Ochs was only 35 at the
time of his death. Yet Bowser is sure to illustrate some of the exciting
highlights of his later period, including his organizing of large-scale
events such a his celebratory ‘the War Is Over’ concert in Central Park
and the ‘An Evening With Salvador Allende’ in honor of the Chilean
people whose radical democracy was stolen from them by a US-backed coup.
Overall, the film does exactly what we, who have been waiting for
something, want it to do. It offers a close-up view of this man who has
often been deemed the protest song’s grandest voice. You’ll peer into
the broken life of Phil Ochs but this image will be far surpassed by his
promise of a new day. And, hell, if this is not enough to inspire you to
attend the next rally for social change, then the music cannot miss. “I
Ain’t Marchin’ Anymore”, “Changes”, “The War is Over”, “White Boots
Marching in a Yellow Land”, “Draft Dodger Rag”, “My Kingdom for a Car”,
“Chords of Fame”, “No More Songs”, “Links in the Chain”, “The Ballad of
Medgar Evars”, “Harlan Kentucky”, “We Call for No Wider War”, “When I’m
Gone”. “There But for Fortune” and it rolls on and on, through the
decades and the next senseless war.

--
http://www.politicalaffairs.net/movie-review-phil-ochs-there-but-for-fortune/
Via InstaFetch

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