Film Review
Woody Allen takes a rose-tinted walk down memory lane in this shameless
nostalgia fest, in which he draws heavily on his own experiences of
growing up in a poor district of New York. Allen does not appear
on screen but he narrates everything that happens, which is essentially
a series of largely unconnected vignettes depicting his family life and
the scurrilous exploits of radio celebrities and wannabes of the
period. Nowadays, it is hard to imagine how important radio was
before television and the internet came along and made it virtually
obsolete. In the 1930s and '40s, radio was not only the primary source
of information for most households, it was also the main medium of mass
entertainment, a veritable dream machine, the heart and soul of every
home.
With his customary wit and wisdom, Woody Allen reminds us of the
importance and magic of radio in its golden age, peppering his
affectionately crafted anecdotes with uplifting songs and music of the
era. Whilst the film has immense charm and is occasionally
hilarious, it doesn't quite gel into a coherent whole and lacks the
punch of the other great films that Allen made around this time.
Radio Days is an affectionate
tribute to an all but forgotten era in which the spoken word had
supremacy over the moving image and people just seemed to get along a
good deal better than they do these days (perhaps because the
universality of radio helped to bring some measure of social
cohesion). The world that Allen conjures up is an alluring one,
but is it really how things were or just a trick of the memory?
Nostalgia is how we choose to remember the past, not so that we can
relive our lives but so that we may recast them as a cosy
fantasy. Allen's account of Depression Era America may be a
fabrication, but it is comforting to see it portrayed in such a warm
and humorous way (the highpoint being nationwide panic over an alien invasion engineered
by a young Orson Welles). Whatever challenges life throws at us, our dreams
will always see us through, even if we can no longer rely on
radio to brighten our days and gift-wrap all our memories.
© James Travers 2012
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Next Woody Allen film:
September (1987)
Film Synopsis
Joe looks back with nostalgia to his days as a pre-adolescent living
with his parents in the Rockaway district of the Queens area of New
York City. It is the mid-1930s and the radio holds an important
place in the lives of Joe and his family. Whilst Joe's Aunt Bea
is frantically searching for a man to spend the rest of her life with
(to be cruelly disappointed every time she finds a promising
candidate), Joe experiences his first adult awakening, when his new
teacher turns out to be a woman he saw posing naked through an open
window. As the poor folk of Queens try to make the best of their
humdrum lives, a cigarette girl named Sally White is out to make a name
for herself in the better off part of the city. Despite her
evident lack of talent and appalling New York accent, Sally is
determined to make her fortune as a radio star, but her big break is
thwarted when those inconsiderate Japs decide to bomb Pearl
Harbour. Ah, happy days...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.