Movie Reviews for American Pop

American Pop

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Movie Reviews of American Pop

Movie Review: American Pop
Summary: 5 Stars

This is a great accomplishment in animation and used to be a rare film to find in print. I'm glad to add it to my collection.

Movie Review: A Family History of Music, Ambition, & Tragedy
Summary: 4 Stars

American Pop is Ralph Bakshi's animated tale of a family's struggle to realize it's musical ambitions through the 20th Century.

Zalmie is a Russian Jewish immigrant to NY, his father a cantor was killed in a pogrom by the Czar's Cossacks. Upon arriving in America his mother is killed in a sweatshop fire, and Zalmie is left to the streets of New York. Zalmie finds his place in the world on Vaudeville, at first distributing chorus slips to customers so they can sing along, then he moves up the Vaudeville ropes to singer. During a USO show in WWI France there's a German attack and Zalmie is wounded in the throat, ending his dream of being a singer. He returns to Vaudeville, becomes a comedian and meets the girl of his dreams, a stripper. Zalmie tries to turn her into a star but life intervenes again, she gets pregnant and Zalmie needing to earn a living falls in with the mob.

Zalmie's ambitions are resurrected in his son Benny a talented piano player, but Benny would rather play with a negro Jazz band than seriously pursue music as his father would like. To please his father Benny marries the mobsters daughter and his life would seem to be set until WWII breaks out and Benny is sent to Europe. While on patrol Benny comes across a piano in an abandoned building where he takes a minute to play a little music. The music rouses a wounded German soldier who for a moment seems to be lulled by Benny's playing, but in a moment that shows the ruthlessness of war, and proof that music doesn't always soothe the savage breast, the German soldier kills Benny.

The story flashes forward to Benny's son Tony, a teenager finding himself smothered in the inertia of the late 50's, early 60's suburban television life. Tony steals a car and is off on his own Jack Kerouac On The Road adventure. When he lands in Kansas he meets a beautiful girl and they have a night of passion. Tony makes his way to San Franscisco where he meets a rock band fronted by Frankie Hart who has a more than passing resemblance to Janis Joplin. Tony lies to them and tells them he writes songs, and Tony proceeds to writing a slew of hit songs, as well as providing drugs to the band. Eventually, the drugs take over and rule Tony's life, Frankie dies, and when the band finds itself in Kansas Tony adopts a kid named Little Petey who reminds him of the girl he meet in Kansas so many years before. Tony and Little Pete go to New York where Tony teaches Little Pete the ins and outs of writing songs and drug dealing, until one day Tony splits, leaving Pete with a legacy of loving music and drug dealing. When Petey grows up he uses his drug dealing connections to get a band interested in songs he's written which culminates in Petey becoming successful, Zalmie's dream realized at last.

If the plot and story seem a little stereotyped or like you've seen them before, you probably have. What Makes American Pop different from other movies is the animation and the music. Bakshi uses the animation to great effect, from what would ordinarily be an average movie to something special, and uses just enough vintage footage to set the tone of the era. The real star of the movie though, is the music. Most of the musical forms and writers of the 20th Century are represented, to name just a few George M Cohan, Scott Joplin, Richard Rodgers, Jerome Kern, Dave Brubeck, Elvis, Lou Reed, Heart, Pat Benatar, Jimi Hendrix, The Doors, Jefferson Airplane, Bob Seeger.

American Pop came out almost 30 years ago, and a couple of years ago I found myself intereseted in seeing the movie again, so I bought the DVD and hoped that I wouldn't find the material dated, and I wasn't disappointed the movie still holds its appeal. The only thing that could have enhanced the DVD was some bonus features, there isn't even a directors commentary, and maybe a documentary on the making of American Pop or on Bakshi's influence in the world of animation, I think it could arguably be said American Pop influenced the animation of today such as the Pixar movies.

Movie Review: Terribly UNDERRATED
Summary: 4 Stars

I never seen an animated film by Ralph Bakshi until now. I was pleasantly surprised to find American Pop such a very good film. It's the exact opposite of what you would expect in a Disney (or Pixar) film, and I don't mean it in a bad way. This is a film for adults: drugs, prostitution, poverty, politics, and bloodshed are just some things that little kids will NEVER understand. But the film also has a good story: we get to see different generations of popular music (from the late 1890's to the 1980's) seen through the eyes of a Russian-Jewish family. It's an effective story, and same goes for the stunning (and diverse) animation. Much of the animation is colorful, realistic, and at times wildly bizarre (at least in the later half of the film). The one problem I had with American Pop is that sometimes it doesn't really feel like an animated film at all. Some sections in the film (particularly scenes with extended dialogue) could have worked better if they were live-action. Still, the film is an underrated gem. The adult story, the animation, the music, the dialogue, much of the film is undeniably solid.

Grade: 8/10

Movie Review: Impressive Pop
Summary: 4 Stars

This is a classic. Visually stunning and engaging, it follows a family through several generations trying to make it in the entertainment industry.

In my opinion, Bakshi outdid himself with this one.

My only problem is that the final episode was too easy. It lacked the pathos of the rest of the movie. It seemed like an anticlimax.

But the music was great!

Movie Review: Music History in animation
Summary: 4 Stars

Ralph Bakshi's masterpiece. "the musical odyssey of a set of genes" I'll second that.The sense of desperate loneliness in the compulsive pursuit of sucess is captured here. Should be required "reading" for any class on the history of popular music in America. The San Fransisco segment essentializes the tragedy of drug addiction that haunts the music business, then and now. Dickie Davis
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