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Neil Young's Greendale An Uplifting Film With a Great Soundtrack

A Filmed Version of Young's Album of the Same Name

By El Bicho, published Jan 10, 2006
Published Content: 558  Total Views: 80,099  Favorited By: 10 CPs
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Rating: 3.0 of 5


Due to technological advancements, smaller attention spans and a limited talent pool, today’s music industry is going back to the business model of the ‘50s where singles are the main focus. No one sent that memo to Neil Young or, more likely, he just threw it away because Greendale is a concept album, or what Neil calls a “musical novel.” He didn’t stop there though. He also filmed a long form video to accompany the music.

The story is about the Green family who live in Greendale, a fictional town in Northern California. We meet Grandpa, who reflects on the problems of the world. He is so aware that he’s even able to comment on the narrator of the story. As Grandpa reads the paper one morning, he tells us that with “a little love and affection/ In everything you do/ Will make the would a better place.” 

However, life is not as wonderful and rosy as those sentiments indicate. We learn this as we meet the rest of the clan: Earl Green, a frustrated artist, his daughter, Sun, who wants to save the planet and their cousin Jed, who looks a lot like the devil.

The film was shot in Super-8mm and blown up to 35mm so it has an extremely grainy look. It takes a few minutes to get used to, but the music and story are so compelling that the visuals and effects don’t distract as much as they could. It’s like watching the cheap special effects on the wonderfully written, British science fiction program Doctor Who. But then there’s an artistic choice that I felt was a mistake. 

When the media descend on the Greens home to interview them about Jed’s killing of a police officer, they cut to the POV of a news camera. The picture is crystal clear as if it was shot on HD video. The transition is jarring and really stands out compared to the blurry blown-up Super-8, reminding us how good images can look, before we are left with the blur again. But then the music and story take hold again.

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