Detroit Metro Times - Screens

Ochs admirers from Christopher Hitchens to Jerry Rubin to Billy Bragg
chime in.
Corey Hall
Published: February 1, 2011
Phil Ochs: There but for Fortune

GRADE: A-

Quixotic, troubled, joyful and haunted, Phil Ochs was among the most
tragic casualties of the collapse of the '60s idealistic dream, because,
deep down, nobody believed in it more than he. A protest singer back
when that actually meant something, Ochs was a flamethrower with a
poet's heart, and a folkie with the rocker's soul.

Texas-born and Ohio-bred, reared with visions of John Wayne, Midwestern
decency and old-fashioned justice, Ochs arrived in New York in the early
'60s determined to become the best and most important singer-songwriter
in the country. Then he met an intense young Minnesotan, né Robert
Zimmerman, and Ochs resigned himself to second-best.

While Dylan — and others from the Greenwich Village coffeehouse music
scene, such as Peter, Paul and Mary — rode the brief folk boom to pop
stardom, Ochs stayed true to his heroes Pete Seeger and Woody Guthrie,
and took Guthrie's anti-fascist message. His topical, incendiary and
often sharply funny early tunes such as "Draft Dodger Rag," "Power and
the Glory" and "I Ain't Marching Anymore" earned him a devoted, cultish
following. As the decade dragged on, as icons fell and the body count
mounted, Ochs grew simultaneously more disillusioned and bolder,
expanding his musical range and complexity and literally taking his act
to the streets. Ochs fancied himself a mix of "Elvis and Che Guevara,"
an image that confounded both the folkie true believers and less
politicized music lovers. It was all too much; in the '70s, Phil
disintegrated into drinking, brawling and fatal depression, a
revolutionary left hopeless after the Vietnam War finally ended.

This moving and solidly constructed doc is never as quirkily artistic as
its subject; the sepia-toned scrapbook imagery is perhaps too
on-the-nose, and the procession of talking heads and stock footage is
standard doc presentation. But, like the singer, There but for Fortune
puts substance atop style.

It's hard to argue the lineup of interviews — a who's who of friends and
admirers, including Tom Hayden, Jerry Rubin, Joan Baez, Christopher
Hitchens, Billy Bragg and more. Conspicuously missing is Ochs' dear old
friend and rival Dylan, not one to sit for interviews.

Sean Penn is here, having tried for years to make an Ochs film; it
would've been a hell of a part for the actor, if not a bummer biopic
without the redemptive third act where the love of a good woman saves
the hero from his destructive ways. Ochs was a troubadour of lost
causes, railing against injustice, bigotry and greed, sadly never quite
facing that there was no cause more lost than himself.

Showing one time only at 4 p.m. on Saturday, Feb. 5, at the Detroit Film
Theatre (inside the DIA, 5200 Woodward Ave., Detroit; 313-833-3237).

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