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Graffiti Bridge

 
Movies:

Graffiti Bridge

  • Director: Prince
  • AMG Rating: star
  • Genre: Musical
  • Movie Type: Rock Musical
  • Themes: Musician's Life
  • Main Cast: Prince, Ingrid Chavez, Morris Day, Jerome Benton, Mavis Staples
  • Release Year: 1990
  • Country: US
  • Run Time: 90 minutes
  • MPAA Rating: PG13

Plot

Prince wrote, directed, and stars in this disastrous sequel to Purple Rain that equates differing musical styles with God, angels, faith, and the struggle between the spiritual and the earthy. Once again Prince is The Kid, still working his emotional damnedest to one-up Morris Day and his band, The Time. In this installment, the boys fight over the ownership of a nightclub called Glam Slam. Both are bequeathed half of the club in a will, and Morris and the Kid want to handle each of their halves differently. Morris treats his part of the club as a popular venue, playing music the public wants to hear, and it is a rousing success. The Kid, on the other hand, wants to bring spirituality into funk -- to make his point he even strikes a crucifixion pose. The result is a battle of the bands with The Time and The Kid jamming off of one another, battling for the souls of the two-drink minimum suckers. ~ Paul Brenner, All Movie Guide

Cast

  • Prince - The Kid
  • Ingrid Chavez - Aura
  • Morris Day - Morris Day
  • Jerome Benton - Jerome Benton
  • Mavis Staples - Melody Cool
George Clinton - Himself; Rosie Gaines; Miko Weaver - Miko Weaver; Levi Seacer, Jr.; Terry Lewis - Terry Lewis; Jesse Johnson - Jesse Johnson; Tevin Campbell - Tevin; Damon Dickson - The Game Boyz; T.C. Ellis - T.C.; Kirk Johnson; Jill Jones - Jill Jones; Monique Mannen - Featured; Tony Mosley; Robin Power - Robin; The Time

Credit

Otis Sallid - Choreography, Randy Phillips - Co-producer, Arnold Stiefel - Co-producer, Helen Horatio - Costume Designer, Jim Shearon - Costume Designer, Prince - Director, Rebecca Ross - Editor, Prince - Composer (Music Score), Prince - Musical Direction/Supervision, Vance Lorenzini - Production Designer, Bill Butler - Cinematographer, Peter MacDonald - Producer, Craig Rice - Producer, Prince - Screenwriter

Similar Movies

Prince: Sexy MF; Prince: Diamonds and Pearls Video Collection; The Apple
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Wikipedia: Graffiti Bridge (film)
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Graffiti Bridge

Theatrical release poster
Directed by Prince
Produced by Randy Phillips
Written by Prince
Starring Prince
Ingrid Chavez
Morris Day
Music by Prince
Cinematography Bill Butler
Editing by Rebecca Ross
Distributed by Warner Bros.
Release date(s) November 2, 1990
Running time 95 min.
Country United States
Language English
Budget $6 million
Gross revenue $4,562,778

Graffiti Bridge is a 1990 drama/musical written, directed, and starring Prince. It is a sequel to his highly successful first film, Purple Rain, though notorious for its relatively low quality and poor performance at the box-office. However, like Purple Rain, it was accompanied by a hit soundtrack.

Contents

Plot

The plot re-joins Purple Rain's lead character The Kid (Prince), in his future life as a performer and club co-owner. Morris (Morris Day), his rival from Purple Rain, returns as co-owner of The Kid's club, Glam Slam, as well as several others in the area, including his mainstay, Pandemonium. The Kid is forced into paying Morris $10,000 so Morris can pay off the mayor; The Kid in turn can keep co-ownership of his club. Losing clientele, The Kid challenges Morris to a music battle for ownership of Glam Slam.

Cast

Production

The film was panned universally for having a wealth of filler; indeed, the film seems to be a collection of music videos strung together with a loose plotline. The film's screenplay was even rejected by Madonna, who turned down the role of the mysterious angel-like figure, Aura, stating that the writing was awful.

A lack of potent characterization or engaging plot left the entire narrative dead and ineffective. The decision to film most scenes in artificial studio sound stages (at Prince's Minneapolis studio Paisley Park) further added a gloomy artifice to the mood.

Interestingly, a few video outtakes have surfaced which indicate that the entire movie was intended to have a more fantastic musical feel not unlike old Hollywood musicals or modern Bollywood. The outtakes of two musical numbers "Can't Stop This Feeling I Got" and "The Latest Fashion" would have helped to instill a fantasy mood, but it seems that these elements were cut at the 11th hour in order to force the movie to seem a more proper relative of "Purple Rain".

Ideas for the filming began as early as 1987, but was canceled numerous times due to casting. Another brief choice was former girlfriend Anna Fantastic, and then girlfriend Kim Basinger and hopes were high that with Basinger in the film, it could be a hit (as she herself was a talented singer as well) but when she and Prince broke up in 1990, Ingrid Chavez was hastily hired. For Mavis Staples' role, Prince had planned on using Patti LaBelle, but it never formalized.

Reception

While Prince's earlier theatrical failures Under the Cherry Moon and Sign ☮' the Times have become cult classics, Graffiti Bridge has yet to achieve any status outside its initial box-office flop.

The critical response for the film was far from favorable, with many reviewers arguing that Prince was attempting to position himself as a "Christ-like" figure, particularly during the sequence for the songs "Still Would Stand All Time" and "Graffiti Bridge". It seemed that The Kid was a far different character from the one in Purple Rain. Indeed, the only characters who remained unchanged were Morris Day and his sidekick Jerome Benton. Cameos included gospel singer Mavis Staples, up-and-coming teen star Tevin Campbell and funk icon George Clinton, although each were confined to roughly one song in the film. The music of the film was seen as the highlight, though "Thieves in the Temple" was the only song to really make an impact on the charts.

The title "Graffiti Bridge" comes from a now torn-down bridge located in Eden Prairie, MN. The bridge was torn down in the early 1990s to make way for new construction[1], but to this day remains a local legend.

References

  1. ^ New York Times, Lovers of Graffiti Rally To Save an Old Bridge, New York Times, February 25, 1990.

External links


 
 
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