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20,000 Days on Earth

Learn something about the artistic process from a famous poet-rock star.

  Grade: B+20,000 Days on Earth

Director: Ian Forsyth (Run for Me), Jane Pollard (Run for Me)

Writers: Nick Cave (The Proposition), Forsyth

Cast: Nick Cave (The Assassination of Jesse James . . .), Susan Bick (Flirt)

Runtime: 97 min.

by John DeSando

". . . The never-ending drip feed of eroticism" Nick Cave

I’m not sure either what that quote means, but what you may get is a sense of writer/musician Nick Cave’s poetic inclinations and the sensuality of his life, encapsulated in a fictional day, his 20,000 day on earth to be specific.  Starring him, of course, because he is the center of his universe, and he believes, maybe a deity or an angel. He once said about his creations: “I can't explain that dividing line between nothing and something that happens within a song, where you have absolutely nothing, and then suddenly you have something. It's like the origin of the universe.

This smooth fictional biography, partially narrated by Cave, first takes us

in his fine car, which he always drives, to visit his therapist (scene so relaxed and interesting I wish we could have heard the results). Then lunching with band mate Warren Ellis, where the talk is mostly music, and over to an archive brimming with his memorabilia.

Interspersed are performances with The Bad Seeds, from his almost Leonard Cohen-like poetic music to his Jagger-like rocking  in Sydney (he’s an Aussie), where the capacity crowd is fully under his spell. As he speaks through the music about its transforming power, he also shows us his struggle to bring poems and lyrics together. He once said about author vs. musician:  “Musicians are at the bottom of the creative pyramid and authors are at the top, and many people think it's unacceptable for someone to attempt to jump from the bottom to the top of the pyramid.”

Along the way we see him and his sons eat pizza and watch Scarface. Although he seems to have little time for his family, when he does, it’s relaxed just the way he presents himself to us in a film that gives much more insight into an artist’s creative process than we usually get with bios.

“My music has to do with beauty, and it's intended to, if not lift the spirits, then be a kind of a balm to the spirits.” Nick Cave

John DeSando, a Los Angeles Press Club first-place winner for National Entertainment Journalism, hosts WCBE’s It’s Movie Time and co-hosts Cinema Classics. Contact him at JDeSando@Columbus.rr.com

John DeSando holds a BA from Georgetown University and a Ph.D. in English from The University of Arizona. He served several universities as a professor, dean, and academic vice president. He has been producing and broadcasting as a film critic on It’s Movie Time and Cinema Classics for more than two decades. DeSando received the Los Angeles Press Club's first-place honors for national entertainment journalism.