Feature Review:
Prairie Home Companion
Written by: Susan
Granger
MODA MAG.COM -- Radio wasn’t always just
computerized music and blowhards spewing political bile. Once upon a
time, there were auditory vaudeville shows, like Garrison Keillor’s
“A Prairie Home Companion,” which is still syndicated, weekly, on
National Public Radio.
“This radio show is the kind of program that died 50 years
ago,” someone remarks, “only someone forgot to tell the
performers.”
So idiosyncratic filmmaker Robert Altman, Keillor, and Ken
LaZebnik have created a fictional tale based on the real-life
Minnesota-based program that’s been on the air since 1974. Set on a
rainy Saturday night at the Fitzgerald Theater in St. Paul, it’s the
final broadcast of the show, hosted by the laid-back, philosophical
Keillor (playing himself) and
chock full of quirky characters – a typically eccentric Altman
ensemble.
Acting as narrator, there’s Guy Noir (Kevin Kline), a
down-on-his-luck detective working as backstage security guard. The
garrulous Johnson sisters, Yolanda (Meryl Streep) and Rhonda (Lily
Tomlin), are country music singers from the county-fair circuit, along
with Yolanda’s sulky, suicide-obsessed daughter, Lola (Lindsay Lohan).
The Old Trailhands, Dusty (Woody Harrelson) and Lefty (John C.
Reilly), are clueless cowboys crooning bawdy ditties. Plus, there’s
a blonde angel-of-death in a white trench coat (Virginia Masden), a
very pregnant stagehand (Maya Rudolph) and the Axeman (Tommy Lee
Jones), representing the Texas conglomerate that bought the radio
station.
Amid the whimsical, folksy anecdotes, droll jingles for fake
products and country western/gospel music, there’s a charming,
genial, easy-going camaraderie that masks the innate complexity of the
collaborative concept, smoothly interweaving improvisational backstage
stories with overlapping voices and contrasting soundplays – and
kudos to Edward Lachman’s mobile cameras. On the Granger Movie Gauge
of 1 to 10, “A Prairie Home Companion” is an evocative, endearing,
nostalgic 9, a gleefully amusing glimpse of down-home Americana.
Rated: 9/10
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