Vertigo

Vertigo
Vertigo

Sunday, January 24, 2021

I AM WOMAN and the Musical Feminist

 


This factual drama is an interesting take on singer Helen Reddy, whose female anthem, I Am Woman, forms the basis of the similarly titled film. As one of the recent spate of music biopics, it depicts an icon who tapped into an important time in our culture.

In the late 1960s, aspiring singer Helen Reddy (Tilda Cobham-Hervey), an Australian, comes to America with her young daughter to launch a singing career only to face skepticism, sexism, and indifference to her style of songs as Beatlemania takes hold. Befriending a music agent, Jeff Wald (Evan Peters), she begins with small nightclubs in New York City and moves to Los Angeles with Wald where record labels like Capitol Records beckon.  Motivated to write her own songs that feature her own ‘voice’, she represents a new kind of pop music that not only takes the charts by storm in the 1970s, but speaks to a growing, nationwide chorus of women’s equal rights. However, family tensions come to a head as drugs and financial ruin threaten everything.

The plot follows the tried and true narrative of radio airplay and luck to create a hit song. The film draws parallels between Reddy’s career and the Women’s Movement as many of her hit songs bracket key plot points including the question ‘if a woman can have a life and a career’. These issues and her personal relationships could have been developed a bit more for dramatic impact.

Cobham-Hervey is fine as the pop star and, with an aura of authenticity, does her own singing instead of dubbing in Reddy’s vocals. Though not on par with similar films as Bohemian Rhapsody, the film will resonate with fans who remember the pop sensation and her influence.

*** of **** stars (for Reddy enthusiasts)







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