Joe Strummer: The Future Is Unwritten
Dir: Julien Temple
2007
****
Joe Strummer: The Future Is Unwritten is a lovingly
put together tribute to The Clash legend following his premature death in 2002.
If you’re a musician and want your story to be told with respect, passion and
truth, then you couldn’t hope for anyone over Julien Temple. I would never
confess to knowing everything about Strummer and The Clash but I was surprised
about how much I didn’t know while watching the documentary. I was at first
confused for instance by the separate scenes that had various different groups
of people in different parts of the world talking about Strummer around huge
bonfires. I learned that in his last few years Strummer organised bonfire
parties and invited many guests to join him for a drink and good conversation
and maybe a little music. His family, close friends and celebrity pals all sit
around the fire talking about how much he meant to them and tell of all the
things about him that many people didn’t know. There are people such as Bono,
Martin Scorsese, Johnny Depp, Flea, John Cussack, Steve Buscemi, John Cooper
Clarke, Jim Jarmusch, Courtney Love, Don Letts, Damien Hirst, Bobby Gillespie
and Michael Stipe, among many, all people of substance who certainly don't need
to be in the film to make themselves seem cool, but genuinely loved the singer
and want to share the joy, creativity and thoughts he brought. The interviews
are heartfelt and informative and the archive footage is pretty comprehensive,
and there were so many aspects of his life that I had no idea about, some of
which really shocked me. I had no idea he married a South African woman, so she
could obtain British citizenship (foreign wives of male Britons could obtain
British nationality via marriage, until the British Nationality Act
1981 came into force). Then there was the incident in 1980, when he was
arrested for hitting a violent member of the audience with his guitar during a
performance in Hamburg was fascinating. This incident shocked Strummer,
and had a lasting personal impact on him. He said in a later interview that,
"It was a watershed - violence had really controlled me for once". He
determined never again to fight violence with violence and became even more
vocal against hate. His work with the Anti-Nazi League and the Rock
Against Racism campaigns are touched on, as is the famous 1980 Rock
Against Racism concert at Victoria Park, as featured in Jack Hazan and
David Mingay’s part fiction, part rockumentary film Rude Boy. The film
explains that Strummer was born John Graham Mellor in Ankara, Turkey. His
Scottish mother, Anna Mackenzie, was a nurse and a crofter's daughter born
and raised in Bonar Bridge in the Scottish Highlands, while his
British father, Ronald Ralph Mellor M.B.E., was a clerical officer- later
attaining the rank of second secretary - in the foreign service. The
family spent much time moving from place to place, and Strummer spent parts of
his early childhood in Cairo, Mexico City and Bonn. At the
age of 9, Strummer and his older brother David, 10, began boarding at the City
of London Freemen's School in Surrey. Strummer rarely saw his parents
during the next seven years. He reflected “At the age of nine I had to say
good-bye to them because they went abroad to Africa or something. I went to
boarding school and only saw them once a year after that – the Government paid
for me to see my parents once a year. I was left on my own, and went to this
school where thick rich people sent their thick rich kids. Another perk of my
father's job”. He took it hard but the move had a far greater effect on his brother.
“David was a year older than me. Funnily enough, you know, he was a Nazi. He
was a member of the National Front. He was into the occult and he used to have
these deaths-heads and cross-bones all over everything. He didn't like to talk
to anybody, and I think suicide was the only way out for him. What else could
he have done?” It’s amazing how different the two brothers turned out, this is
respectfully touched upon. Strummer did so much in his life, it was always
going to be impossible to cover everything, although it’s still quite
comprehensive. Strummer appeared in a couple of my favorite films, and while
Jim Jarmusch speaks about filming 1989’s Mystery Train, it would have been cool
if Aki Kaurismäki could have spoken about his 1990 film I Hired a Contract
Killer which stared Strummer as a guitarist in a pub, performing two songs
("Burning Lights" and "Afro-Cuban Bebop"). Still, lots to
enjoy and inform - I also had no idea that he fronted The Pouges in the early
90s when singer Shane MacGowan temporarily left the band. The highlight of the
film for me was when, on 15 November 2002, Strummer and the Mescaleros played a
benefit show for striking fire fighters in London, at the Acton Town
Hall. Mick Jones was in the audience, and joined the band on stage
during the Clash's "Bankrobber". An encore followed with Jones
playing guitar and singing on "White Riot" and "London's
Burning". This performance marked the first time since 1983 that Strummer
and Jones had performed together on stage. Jones remarked in the
film that it was totally unplanned and that he felt compelled to join Strummer
on stage. It’s heartbreaking to know that the pair were writing new Clash songs
and were preparing to get back together just before his untimely death. Awesome
musician, lovely man, loving tribute. I really wish I had a chance to have seen
him play live.
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