Rainbow Bridge (film)

Rainbow Bridge is a 1971 film directed by Chuck Wein centering on the late 1960s counterculture on the Hawaiian island of Maui. Filmed with non-professional actors and without a script, it features largely improvised scenes with a variety of characters. To bolster the film, producer Michael Jeffery brought in his client Jimi Hendrix to film an outdoor concert. Hendrix's heavily edited (no complete songs) performance appears near the end of the film.

Rainbow Bridge
Directed byChuck Wein
Produced by
Written byCharlie Bacis
StarringPat Hartley
Music byJimi Hendrix
CinematographyVilis Lapenieks
Production
company
Antahkarana Productions
Distributed by
  • Transvue Pictures
  • Alcyone Releasing
Release date
Running time
125 minutes (original)
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$700,000

Rainbow Bridge was a critical failure and has been re-released on video tape and DVD formats. Although it only contains 17 minutes of Hendrix performing, it continues to attract attention as his second-to-last American concert and the last one filmed.

A documentary film, titled Music, Money, Madness ... Jimi Hendrix in Maui, about the making of Rainbow Bridge was released on November 20, 2020. It was accompanied by an album, Live in Maui, reported to include all of Hendrix's performances recorded during the filming.

Background

Faced with a serious cash flow problem, Jeffery approached Reprise Records parent Warner Bros. with an idea for a youth film.[1] He was able to secure a $450,000 advance with the promise of a soundtrack by Hendrix.[1] While in Maui, Jeffery met Mike Hynson, star of The Endless Summer surf epic, and wanted to develop a film. With the proposed title Wave, it would be centered on the Maui countercultural community.[2] Jeffery enlisted Chuck Wein, who had produced three Andy Warhol Factory films.[3] Wein brought in Pat Hartley as the star, who had appeared in some of his films.[4]

Wein envisioned Rainbow Bridge as "a kind of space-age Candid Camera. We're going to place Pat [New York model Pat Hartley, the protagonist] in all kinds of real-life situtations, and film what happens. We're going to shoot a lot of film and just see what comes out of it."[5] Harry Shapiro adds, "the idea was to shoot an antidote to Easy Rider, showing the positive side of the youth movement."[6]

Wein and art director Melinda Merryweather "invited outrageous people to portray themselves in Rainbow Bridge. They included dope smugglers, priests and nuns, acidheads, gays, groupies, environmentalists, and a group who claimed to be from Venus", according to Hendrix biographer Steven Roby.[4] Before long, Warner's advance was used up with little to show for it.[7] Although there was no plan for a Hendrix concert, Jeffery decided that a filmed performance was needed to rescue his investment.[5] Later record producer John Jansen recalled, "Jeffery had to talk Hendrix into performing. Up to that point, he had refused to write a note of music for the film."[8]

Plot

The loosely documentary-style film is centered on the experiences of a New York model, who travels from San Diego, California, to an occult center on the island of Maui, Hawaii.[6] While there, "she encounters various devotees of surfing, clairvoyance, zen, yoga, meditation, Tai-Chi and the odd ufoloist".[6] As it unfolds, a free concert by Jimi Hendrix is staged in a former pasture in the upcountry region (2,000 feet above sea level) near Olinda, southeast of the center of the town of Makawao, on the northwest, upcountry slope of Haleakalā. A few hundred island hippies, surfers, and local residents show up to witness the event.[9] Hendrix performed with the post–Jimi Hendrix Experience "Cry of Love" tour group, drummer Mitch Mitchell and bassist Billy Cox. A group of Hare Krishnas chanted "Om" for a few minutes and Wein introduced the group.[9] Although Hendrix played two full sets (approximately 50 minutes each), due to technical problems, only about 17 minutes of film footage was deemed usable.

Releases

Rainbow Bridge premiered at the Aquarius Theatre in Hollywood in the fall of 1971.[10] The original length of the theatrical release was 123 minutes.[10] However, it was soon edited to cut down on the acting scenes, with one version lasting 70 minutes.[10] The 2000 re-release by Rhino Video restored the original full-length version. Although Wein claimed that all of the usable footage of Hendrix was included in the film,[11] full-length performances of "Dolly Dagger" and "Villanova Junction" (both from the second set) have appeared on bootleg videos.

Critical reception

The response to Rainbow Bridge is uniformly negative. Shadwick calls it "a snafu of impressive dimensions even for the hippie generation."[5] He adds that it was "so drug-addled, pseudo-mystical and stuffed with narcissistic, self-important onscreen hippies that the only hope of saving it indeed was to put Hendrix on celluloid".[5] Shapiro describes it as "a ludicrous farrago of pseudo-mystical acid babble devoid of sincerity ... Overall, the best thing that can be said about Rainbow Bridge is that, after seventy-one minutes, it finishes".[12] Writing for AllMusic, critic Bruce Eder comments, "Hendrix plays some superb music in the concert sequence that concludes this documentary—the rest is all devoted to pre-new-age mumbo-jumbo at a Hawaiian retreat".[13] Later Hendrix producer John McDermott calls it a "disastrous, embarrassing failure ... Jeffery's attempt to rescue his own personal finances via Hendrix's memory was disgraceful."[11]

Soundtrack

A soundtrack album, also titled Rainbow Bridge, was released in October 1971.[14] Although it contains some incidental studio recordings by Hendrix used in the film, the album does not include any of the recorded performances from the Maui concert.[14] Hendrix's performances are edited for the film. Live in Maui, an album containing both of the full sets (20 songs) was released on November 20, 2020.[15]

Edited song performances included in the film (all from the first set, except where indicated):[16]

Snippets of several newer songs recorded by Hendrix are used as incidental music for the film, often under dialogue or ambient sounds.[16] The full-length versions were released on the 1971 Rainbow Bridge album, except where indicated:

The version of "Hear My Train A Comin'" that appears on the album was taken from the first show on May 30, 1970, at the Berkeley Community Theatre in Berkeley, California. In 2014, the original Rainbow Bridge album was reissued in both CD and LP formats.[19]

Notes

Citations

  1. Roby 2002, p. 173.
  2. McDermott, Kramer & Cox 2009, p. 239.
  3. Cross 2005, p. 306.
  4. Roby 2002, p. 174.
  5. Shadwick 2003, p. 232.
  6. Shapiro & Glebbeek 1990, p. 430.
  7. McDermott & Kramer 1992, p. 299.
  8. Black 1999, p. 235.
  9. Cross 2005, p. 309.
  10. Roby 2002, p. 176.
  11. McDermott & Kramer 1992, p. 300.
  12. Shapiro & Glebbeek 1990, pp. 430, 432.
  13. Eder, Bruce. "Jimi Hendrix: Rainbow Bridge [Rhino Video/DVD]". AllMusic. Retrieved August 14, 2014.
  14. Shapiro & Glebbeek 1990, p. 542.
  15. Bienstock, Richard. "Jimi Hendrix's infamous 1970 Maui concerts documented in new film and live album". Guitarworld.com. Retrieved September 15, 2020.
  16. Rainbow Bridge  The Original, Restored, Full-length Theatrical Release (DVD notes). Jimi Hendrix. Los Angeles: Rhino Home Video. 1996. Program insert. R2 976656.CS1 maint: others (link)
  17. McDermott 2000, p. 66.
  18. Loder 2001, p. 14.
  19. "The Cry of Love & Rainbow Bridge to Be Reissued on CD & LP September 16". Jimihendrix.com (official website). September 16, 2014. Retrieved September 29, 2014.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.