Asbury
Park: Riot, Redemption, Rock ‘n’ Roll **
Dir: Tom Jones. Documentary with: Bruce Springsteen, Steve van
Zandt, Southside Johnny Lyon, Garry Tallent. 117 mins. Cert: 12A
The coastal New Jersey enclave of Asbury Park was pinned firmly
to the pop-cultural map upon the release of Bruce Springsteen’s debut album
“Greetings from Asbury Park, N.J.” in 1973. Frontloading testimony from
Springsteen himself in his role as rock’s plain-spoken elder statesman, this
documentary from director Tom Jones (not that one) does a haphazard job of
digging around the region in a bid to uncover how that sound – and a wider
Asbury scene – emerged. Trailing in some distance behind 2016’s autobiography Born to Run and the stage show Springsteen on Broadway (filmed for
Netflix last year), the results form a distinctly minor item of Bruceology,
exposed in its threadbare second half as something diehard fans might
eventually watch for free on a flatscreen in the foyer of the Asbury Park
Chamber of Commerce.
By far the film’s most useful feature is its opening history
of an area that served as a genuine East Coast melting pot: the only spot along
the Jersey shore where African-Americans could bathe in public – partly, it
transpires, as the sea met the county’s sewage output there. That laissez-faire
party town air has traditionally accounted for the utopian mix of white and
black musicians within Springsteen’s fabled E Street Band, yet as many of those
performers testify here, their early recordings were born out of the July 1970
unrest that turned neighbours against one another, and aimed at restoring unity
to a divided community. A starstruck Jones hardly pushes his interviewees on
it, but somewhere in his naggingly monotonous morass of talking heads is the tale
of how The Boss gained a social conscience.
It’s somewhat shaky even as a one-night-only cinematic proposition, presenting some archive clips in the wrong aspect ratio, and generally resembling an extended episode of VH1’s Classic Albums, complete with what look suspiciously like fadeouts for ads. A fondness for blokey rock anecdotes will sustain viewers through the first hour, but the Asbury revival story plays as terribly bland, with its faux-inspirational score and shots of newbuilds gleaming in the late-summer sun. Your reward for enduring these civic-minded platitudes is a few minutes of Bruce and Little Stevie trading guitar licks at a charity do, and passing glimpses of poignant pop minutiae – such as the listing Springsteen placed while seeking a pianist – but the whole retains the humdrum look of documentary-making by committee.
Asbury Park: Riot, Redemption, Rock 'n' Roll screens in selected cinemas tonight.
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