Home of the Brave (1986 film)
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Home of the Brave: A Film by Laurie Anderson | |
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Directed by | Laurie Anderson |
Produced by | Paula Mazur |
Starring | Laurie Anderson Adrian Belew William S. Burroughs |
Music by | Laurie Anderson Peter Gabriel (song "Excellent Birds") |
Cinematography | John Lindley |
Editing by | Lisa Day |
Distributed by | Warner Bros. |
Release date(s) | July, 1986 |
Running time | 90 min. |
Country | USA |
Language | English |
Gross revenue | $1,250,000 |
IMDb profile |
Home of the Brave is a 1986 American concert film featuring the music of Laurie Anderson, who also directed the movie. The film's full on-screen title is Home of the Brave: A Film by Laurie Anderson. The performances were filmed in Brooklyn during the summer of 1985.
The film included appearances by guitarist Adrian Belew, Beat author William S. Burroughs (who famously briefly dances a slow tango with Anderson during one song), keyboardist Joy Askew, and percussionist David Van Tieghem. Also, Barry Sonnenfeld, who was early in his movie-making career, receives an early film credit for operating "second projection camera" on this film. The film was released by Warner Bros., but was commercially unsuccessful.
A soundtrack album, which contained studio versions of some songs from the film, and live versions of others, was released concurrently with the film (see Home of the Brave (soundtrack)). A music video for the song "Language is a Virus", using footage from the film but the studio recording of the song, received wide airplay.
The film was briefly available on VHS and Laserdisc in the early 1990s, and in January 2007, Anderson announced on her official website that the film is to be released to DVD in the near future as part of a box set of her films.
Musical selections included songs taken from Anderson's 1984 album, Mister Heartbreak (the film was shot during a tour in support of the album), as well as a couple of selections from her United States multimedia show of 1983 and several original pieces. Warner Brothers requested Anderson create a single-friendly release from the soundtrack, so she recorded a faster-tempo, "dance mix" version of the song "Smoke Rings". Ultimately, this recording was not released; however, it can be heard during the All-Night Diner sequence of her short film What You Mean We?.
The first song performed by Anderson in the film is "Excellent Birds", a collaboration with Peter Gabriel from Mister Heartbreak. Although Gabriel does not appear in this film and the song is not performed as a duet, Home of the Brave was released a few months after a second version with Anderson was released as "This Is the Picture (Excellent Birds)" on Gabriel's album, So.
Gabriel had also provided vocals for "Gravity's Angel" on Mister Heartbreak. Guitarist Adrian Belew sings the part more prominently in the film.
[edit] Soundtrack
The following pieces are performed in the film:
- Good Evening (instrumental)
- Zero and One (spoken word)
- Excellent Birds
- Old Hat (spoken word)
- Drum Dance (instrumental)
- Smoke Rings
- Late Show (instrumental with vocal sample by William S. Burroughs)
- White Lily (spoken word)
- Sharkey's Day
- How to Write (instrumental with spoken word introduction by Won-sang Park)
- Kokoku
- Radar (instrumental with wordless vocalizations by Anderson)
- Gravity's Angel
- Langue D'Amour
- Talk Normal
- Difficult Listening Hour (spoken word)
- Language is a Virus
- Sharkey's Night
- Credit Racket (instrumental)
Only "Late Show", "White Lily", "Radar" and "Sharkey's Night" appear on the soundtrack album as they are performed in the film. Studio versions of "Smoke Rings", "Language is a Virus" and "Talk Normal" are used on the album, as is "Credit Racket" which is also a studio track, played over the closing credits in the film. None of the other performances in this film have to date been released in audio format.
In addition to the above, William Burroughs also performs two brief excerpts from "Sharkey's Night", the song he performs on Anderson's album Mr. Heartbreak. In the film, Anderson performs the complete song herself at the end of the movie.