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Runnin’ Down A Dream:
Tom Petty And The Heartbreakers
Reviewed By Rich Drees
Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers have been an undeniable force in
American rock music for the past three decades. As a rock band, they
kept true to their three chord inspirations when other bands were
producing long, bloated, eight-minute art rock pieces. While this
adherence would get them lumped into the burgeoning punk movement
with bands like Talking Heads, the Ramones and others, it was
nothing more than the actualization of the band’s “Don’t bore us,
get to the chorus” credo. As pearl Jam frontman and Petty fan Eddie
Vedder states, “The first time you hear a new Tom Petty song, it
already sounds like a classic.”
Unfortunately,
Runnin’ Down A Dream comes off feeling more like a rather
shallow, four-hour episode of VH-1’s Behind The Music than a
documentary that probes the history of the band. Despite already
knowing the band’s history, there are plenty of great live concert
and behind-the-scenes footage sure to please fans. But while Tom
Petty may sing that he won’t back down, this documentary takes every
opportunity to back away from examining Petty’s personal life and
its relationship to his music. Early in the film, Petty states that
he was only married a few days before his original band headed to
Los Angeles. His wife is next mentioned briefly 20 years later in
the band’s history during a short segment about a 1987 fire that
destroyed Petty’s home. A third mention, thrown out off-handedly,
credits her divorce from Petty as the inspiration for a song.
Also left
unexamined is the impact that drugs had on the band. There are a few
fleeting references to pot, including a story played strictly for
laughs, that when it comes time to discuss bassist Howie Epstein
death from a heroine overdose, the news seems to come from
completely out of the blue.
Although the
movie professes to want to be strictly about the band and its music,
it fails to recognize that such things are rarely created in a
vacuum. Band mates and friends talk about Petty being an instinctual
artist, where songs are not agonized over so much as spontaneously
created. While it is admirable that Petty may not want to question
too deeply his own creative process, it seems a disservice to the
audience for the movie not to explore those issues.
The film makes
a few claims that may strike some as dubious, such the boast the
Petty was the first artist to sue his record company for control of
his music. True, Petty was involved in a legal struggle with MCA
Records in the late 1970s, but Frank Zappa had been in a similar
suit at the early part of the same decade. It may be cynical to
point out that Zappa’s law suit was with Warner Brothers Records who
produced this film, but those are the facts and I’ll leave it to the
reader draw their own conclusion.
As it stands,
Runnin’ Down A Dream is a nice, if a bit dry and
self-congratulatory, primer for those interested in a surface
history of the band or just looking for a great collection of
concert and behind-the-scenes footage. Those more interested in a
deeper understanding of the man behind the music will have to look
elsewhere. |