Review: ‘CBGB’ caricatures rather than characterizes New York punks
In the 1970s, New York’s legendary CBGB club was a crowded petri dish for the rock contagion labeled punk. But Randall Miller’s movie glorifying this musical movement and the shaggy gatekeeper behind it — unfazed club owner Hilly Kristal (Alan Rickman) — is a crass, jokey nostalgia piece, as if punk had been co-opted by K-Tel.
For starters, who’s the audience for “CBGB”? If it’s the uninitiated, then the aggressive use of comic graphics and comics-panel framing and labeling — oh, so that’s Debbie Harry (Malin Akerman) and the Ramones, playing their incredibly identifiable songs! — reads as patronizing and needlessly distracting. (Then there’s the expository dialogue: “Damn it, you’re the father of underground rock!”) If aimed at rock aficionados, then the greatest-hits-style, montage-laden treatment of the bands’ mythic postures — Harry flirted, Patti Smith cursed, the Ramones (led by Joel David Moore as Joey) fought — feels more like vaudeville than an evocation of something raw, potent and historically original.
There’s fun in Rickman’s portrayal of Kristal, a stoic, sonorous father figure for the untamed, unusual, and — in the case of the band he tried to cash in on, the self-destructive Dead Boys (with Rupert Grint as Cheetah Chrome) — unmanageable. But in its stylistically flailing stab at authenticity, “CBGB” ends up merely a mess of caricatures.
“CBGB.” MPAA rating: R for language throughout, some sexual content, drug use, and a scene of violence. Running time: 1 hour, 41 minutes. At ArcLight Hollywood. Expands Oct. 11 to Laemmle Music Hall, Beverly Hills; and Pasadena Playhouse 7.
More to Read
Only good movies
Get the Indie Focus newsletter, Mark Olsen's weekly guide to the world of cinema.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.