Jonathan Demme points his concert camera at Justin Timberlake

SHARE Jonathan Demme points his concert camera at Justin Timberlake
2016_tiff____jt__the_tennessee_kids__premiere_64019936.jpg

Justin Timberlake (left) hams it up with “JT + The Tennessee Kids” director Jonathan Demme at the premiere of the film at the Toronto International Film Festival. | Chris Pizzello/Invision/AP

TORONTO — Jonathan Demme is still infatuated with the concert film.

The director of “Stop Making Sense,” the landmark 1984 Talking Heads concert film, numerous Neil Young documentaries (including “Neil Young: Heart of Gold”) and a Robyn Hitchcock capsule (“Storefront Hitchcock”), Demme has long been training his cameras on stages to capture the visceral thrill of music in action.

“I’ve come to believe, and I kind of felt this when we did ‘Stop Making Sense,’ that shooting live music is kind of like the purest form of filmmaking,” Demme said in an interview at last month’s Toronto International Film Festival. “There’s no script to worry about. It’s not a documentary, so you don’t have to wonder where this story is going and what we can use. It’s just: Here come the musicians. Here come the dancers. The curtain goes up. They have at it and we get to respond in the best way possible to what they’re doing up there.”

His latest concert film, “Justin Timberlake + the Tennessee Kids,” documents the final Las Vegas concerts in 2015 from Timberlake’s two-year “20/20” tour. The film is now streaming on Netflix.

Though Demme is perhaps most famous for his fiction films (“The Silence of the Lambs,” ”Philadelphia,” ”Something Wild”), music has long coursed through his movies. His last, 2015’s “Ricki and the Flash,” starred Meryl Streep as an aging rock star, long absent from her family.

“I can’t play any instrument and I have a hideous voice,” Demme says. “But I’ve discovered that when I shoot music, I actually feel like I’ve become part of the band and I have something to do with the creation of music, which is a very good feeling for someone who loves music as much as I do.”

“Justin Timberlake + the Tennessee Kids” is a far larger pop spectacle than Demme has tackled before. To do so, he shot with many more cameras than he usually does. But many of the identifiable elements of a Demme concert film are there: the close eye for the rapport among performers, the unbroken focus on the stage.

“Not everybody is a great subject for a performance film, obviously. You’ve got to have that lucky confluence of events where the music just really thrills you. Just: ‘I want to capture that and share it with people,’ ” says Demme. “No, I will never tire of filming music. I love it.”

Jake Coyle, Associated Press

The Latest
Chicago artist Jason Messinger created the murals in 2018 during a Blue Line station renovation and says his aim was for “people to look at this for 30 seconds and transport them on a mini-vacation of the mind. Each mural is an abstract idea of a vacation destination.”
MV Realty targeted people who had equity in their homes but needed cash — locking them into decades-long contracts carrying hidden fees, the Illinois attorney general says in a newly filed lawsuit. The company has 34,000 agreements with homeowners, including more than 750 in Illinois.
The artist at Goodkind Tattoo in Lake View incorporates hidden messages and inside jokes to help memorialize people’s furry friends.
The bodies of Richard Crane, 62, and an unidentified woman were found shot at the D-Lux Budget Inn in southwest suburban Lemont.
The strike came just days after Tehran’s unprecedented drone-and-missile assault on Israel.