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Publication: Time [US]
Date: August 6, 1984
Section:
Page Number(s):
Length:
Title: "His Highness of Haze"
Written By: Jack Cocks
Stumped. For a long minute, anyhow. When Apollonia asked Prince-and
yes, those are their real names, approximately-"Is there anything you
can't do?" there was a lingering silence. A tough question to
put such a tyro. More silence. A fast career review was clearly in
order.
There would be no question of just skipping to the highlights since
1978, when Warner Bros. Records released his first album when he was 17,
for Prince it has been highlights all the way. For You was
not the hottest seller in the stores, but the fact that Prince had
written, produced and played all the instruments on his first effort got
the press making comparisons to Stevie Wonder. There were four more
albums and a wonderful grab bag of singles like When You Were Mine
and Little Red Corvette . Now there is Purple Rain
, a No. 1 sound-track album with a No. 1 single, When Doves Cry
, that is the first song since Billie Jean to reach the
top slots simultaneously on the pop, black and dance charts. Purple
Rain had already sold nearly 2.5 million copies before the movie
was released last Friday. This is serious business. So is the movie, a
short-circuited psychodrama that grafts snazzy performance footage onto
the fictive fever chart of an angst-ridden musician called The Kid and
played by Prince himself. The movie has been pulling down real
tub-thumper reviews, the sort of hot-seat hype that gives some
indication of the way Prince can generate fever and keep the temperature
high.
He does it with a peculiar combination of ambisexual eroticism and
self-mythologizing. Until Purple Rain , Prince played at being a
prisoner of sex who craved a life sentence. Some of his song titles
sounded like cuts on a Pigmeat Markham party record (Head , Soft
and Wet ). If there was a unifying theme to his lyrics--indeed, a
governing obsession--it was that carnal knowledge is the ultimate
wisdom. Party till you drop, make out till you molder: self-realization
through rutting.
Purple Rain , both album and movie, is designed for wider
consumption. Prince's performing entourage still includes young women
attired in flash-happy lingerie. But Prince has dispensed with
performing in his leopardskin skivvies, and for the movie camera,
dresses up in high-heeled boots, ruffled shirts, brocaded jackets. If
anyone notices the similarly suited ghost of Jimi Hendrix floating
about, so much the better. Hendrix's classic Purple Haze has
left all sorts of echoes around Prince's neighborhood, and not just in
the music. Prince has both mastered the Hendrix style and contemporized
it; he has become something of a past master at haze in general.
The plot of Purple Rain , which Scenarist William Blinn (Roots
, Fame ) and first-time Feature Director Albert Magnoli both
deny is specifically biographical, nevertheless hews roughly to the
broad outlines of Prince's life. (Prince declines all interviews.)
Shot entirely in Minneapolis, where Prince Rogers Nelson was born and
grew up, and where he became a regent of the local music scene even
before that first album came out in 1978, the movie uses everyone's real
name for characters ("We've all called Prince `The Kid' for a long
time," says Band Member Lisa Coleman) and a lot of real locations.
The Kid has also been provided, like his real-life doppelganger, with a
black father and a Mediterranean mother. In the movie, Dad cuffs Mom
around a good deal: he is a frustrated musician, which explains these
bouts of violent temper; she shrieks and screams a lot, which presumably
demonstrates her ethnicity. If women are sexual baubles in Prince's
songs, in his movie they are tarnished angels who love to have their
wings clipped. Apollonia (the "baptismal name" of Newcomer Patricia
Kotero, 22) strips down and jumps in to an icy lake to win The Kid's
approval. The Kid, arrogant, sensitive, injured and defensively
sadistic, realizes he has been thoroughly psyched by his parents. He
salves the wounds by dedicating a song to his father, performing a tune
written by the young women of the band and fetching Apollonia on his
motorcycle for a last, cathartic concert.
Elvis did all this, and more, and better, in King Creole and
Jailhouse Rock , but each new decade needs its icons. Prince is a
suitably odd one for these askew times, albeit something of a
miniature. He is frequently photographed from low angles or astride a
motorcycle, but when he can be caught in what passes for a spontaneous
composition, he seems to be the height of a coffee table. He has the
faintly demented courtly charm of Dwight Frye swallowing flies in
Dracula , but his sexual charisma is at low tide in the dramatic
scenes. All this changes in performance, where Prince really comes out
wailing, part Hendrix, part Screamin' Jay Hawkins. If music alone could
make a movie masterpiece, then Purple Rain might have a shot.
Its score is ecumenical rock, echoing everyone from Hendrix and Sly
Stone to Brian Wilson and Earth, Wind and Fire, yet remaining entirely
original overall. It may have the best original rock music ever written
for a movie.
"He's like a Mozart," enthuses Apollonia. "I visited his house on a
lake 20 miles outside of Minneapolis. It is purple. It's pretty. He
has a studio in there. He lives in that studio." Apollonia shares a
number of things with Prince, including "pretty much the same measures.
I'm 36-24-36 and he's got a well-developed upper torso"; some articles
of clothing, such as his suits and her lace tanks ("He's a ladies man,
not homosexual. He does love his women"); and a phone number. "The hot
line, I guess you'd call it," Apollonia says. "That's right by his
bed. No one else has the number." But it was in person that Apollonia
popped the question. The toughie, the one that provoked lingering
silence.
Finally Prince had an answer for her. "Anything I can't do? I can't
cook."
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