Why a David Bowie biopic will always be doomed to… | Little White Lies

Why a David Bowie biopic will always be doomed to fail

11 Jan 2021

Words by Shelby Cooke

Backlit figure with red hair, facing away from camera, silhouetted against bright light.
Backlit figure with red hair, facing away from camera, silhouetted against bright light.
Films like Vel­vet Gold­mine and Star­dust will only ever suc­ceed at pro­ject­ing a fic­tion­alised ver­sion of the Star Man.

In the open­ing scene of Star­dust, Gabriel Range’s new David Bowie biopic, we wit­ness a merg­ing of two pow­er­ful pop cul­ture images: Bowie (John­ny Fly­nn) as Major Tom and the black hole sequence from Stan­ley Kubrick’s 2001: A Space Odyssey.

You’d expect such a pair­ing when watch­ing a film about the ear­ly inspi­ra­tions of a rel­a­tive­ly unknown Bowie, who was inspired to write his chart-top­ping hit Space Odd­i­ty’, which intro­duced the char­ac­ter of Major Tom, after see­ing Kubrick’s film. But the com­par­i­son goes beyond just pay­ing homage to the musician’s artis­tic influences.

In fact, it intro­duces the con­cept of the fic­tion­al man. Bowie, like Bow­man (Keir Dul­lea), is liv­ing between space and Earth; is he a space­man or an earth­ling, in a movie or in real life? From the open­ing moments of Star­dust, we’re meant to under­stand that this Bowie is just as real as Bow­man, which could mean not real at all.

Range’s film draws on one of the most impor­tant aspects of Bowie’s art: its con­nec­tion to the cin­e­mat­ic. Bowie loved films, and many of his songs, stage pro­duc­tions and music videos took inspi­ra­tion from works with­in the cin­e­mat­ic canon. As an actor, Bowie craft­ed a diverse and under­rat­ed fil­mog­ra­phy that saw him work with some of the world’s most respect­ed auteurs.

But for some­one who had such a spe­cial rela­tion­ship with cin­e­ma, Bowie nev­er want­ed a biopic to be made of his life. We’ve seen oth­er musi­cians with a sim­i­lar taste for the dra­mat­ics thrive in the recre­ation of their life on film, such as Elton John and Rock­et­man, but until now no film­mak­er has been able to make an autho­rised biog­ra­phy of Bowie.

And there’s a rea­son for that. Bowie was above all a per­for­mance artist; he played his role until his dying day, giv­ing us a con­scious­ly con­struct­ed iden­ti­ty through­out his entire career. Bowie was a char­ac­ter, not a man.

Indeed, David Bowie’ was cre­at­ed by David Jones, and Zig­gy Star­dust, Aladdin Sane and the Thin White Duke were exten­sions of this char­ac­ter. From the peak of his fame in the 1970s through his tran­si­tion to bohemi­an Berlin­er and 80s pop star­dom, he con­stant­ly changed and adapt­ed his per­sona, nev­er allow­ing us to see behind the mirage. David Bowie was David Jones’ great­est work of art.

Person wearing a black hat and casual clothing, looking serious.

Bowie was nev­er authen­tic in any rep­re­sen­ta­tion of him­self; he was a hyp­ocrite, a con­tra­dic­tion. He repeat­ed­ly mor­phed into some­thing else, so that we could nev­er tru­ly under­stand the man behind the mask. As Eliz­a­beth McCarthy, an aca­d­e­m­ic on Bowie’s star­dom, notes: “‘Bowie’ becomes a col­lab­o­ra­tive project with no real begin­ning and no real end.”

It’s clear, then, why Bowie’s estate will nev­er autho­rise a bio­graph­i­cal film about him – it would sim­ply spoil the illu­sion. Nonethe­less, there have now been two dra­mat­ic inter­pre­ta­tions of the David Bowie sto­ry: Star­dust, which has been reject­ed by his son, the film­mak­er Dun­can Jones, and Todd Haynes’ Vel­vet Gold­mine, which at one point dur­ing pro­duc­tion was threat­ened with a law­suit. These films, despite their unof­fi­cial sta­tus, play an impor­tant role in the immor­tal­i­sa­tion of Bowie’s fake image.

Vel­vet Gold­mine, which was ini­tial­ly a much clos­er retelling of Bowie’s meta­mor­pho­sis into Zig­gy Star­dust, fol­lows jour­nal­ist Arthur Stu­art (Chris­t­ian Bale) as he embarks on writ­ing an arti­cle about the enig­mat­ic, now reclu­sive, pop star Bri­an Slade (Jonathan Rhys Mey­ers), who planned a fake assas­si­na­tion of him­self dur­ing a per­for­mance as his alien alter-ego Maxwell Demon. The film makes an obvi­ous com­par­i­son between Bowie, who killed’ his own alien alter-ego when he pro­claimed to his ador­ing fans at the Ham­mer­smith Odeon that this will be the last show we ever do.”

Although the film recounts Slade’s rise to cult star­dom, the sto­ry isn’t exclu­sive­ly about him. Rather, it’s a reflec­tion on the influ­ence one man, or per­haps the idea of a man, can have over an entire gen­er­a­tion. Arthur nev­er gets to know Slade; he only knows the con­cept of him that has been cre­at­ed through the mem­o­ries of those in his per­son­al cir­cle. But what Slade stood for – his queer artis­tic expres­sion – allows Arthur to find him­self, to under­stand his own iden­ti­ty. Although Slade is a fic­tion­al ver­sion of Bowie, in a very real way he cap­tures the most impor­tant part of Bowie’s influ­ence as Zig­gy: the pow­er of cre­ative indi­vid­ual iden­ti­ty to change the think­ing of a generation.

Unlike Vel­vet Gold­mine, Star­dust is more lit­er­al in its recre­ation of Bowie’s life. Set in the ear­ly 70s, it sees John­ny Flynn’s Bowie try­ing to make it big in Amer­i­ca before the cre­ation of Zig­gy Star­dust. The film fol­lows the bare bones of what is known to be accu­rate from that time: Bowie went to Amer­i­ca with Mer­cury Records to tour his album The Man Who Sold the World’, and the vis­it was a com­plete fail­ure, not gain­ing the musi­cian any more acclaim or pop­u­lar­i­ty than he came with.

But this is where the bio­graph­i­cal nature ends (the film begins with the dis­claimer This film is [most­ly] fic­tion­al”). Range and Fly­nn make it clear that this Bowie is pure fic­tion. Fly­nn is hard­ly a dead ringer for Bowie; aside from his cloth­ing and cos­met­ics, he doesn’t real­ly look or sound like the singer. We aren’t meant to see Fly­nn as Bowie (or David Jones, for that mat­ter), but rather as a Bowie char­ac­ter – this one is the insane, philo­soph­i­cal rock star on the brink of a schiz­o­phrenic breakdown.

Both of these films teeter on the edge between fic­tion and real­i­ty. They show us only what we know to be true about the star from pub­lic knowl­edge, since nei­ther pro­duc­tion had access to peo­ple who knew Bowie per­son­al­ly. Because of this, they serve as yet anoth­er piece of fic­tion; anoth­er piece of the per­for­mance art that is David Bowie. These films, like Bowie him­self, project yet anoth­er fic­tion­alised ver­sion of the star: Vel­vet Gold­mine plays with actu­al­ly mak­ing Bowie a fic­tion­al char­ac­ter, where­as Star­dust fic­tion­alis­es the man.

Where Star­dust fails in cap­tur­ing the life and work of David Bowie is that, from the begin­ning, it labels itself as a biopic. But, in a way, Vel­vet Gold­mine is more auto­bi­o­graph­i­cal than Star­dust or any oth­er Bowie biopic’ will ever be. Haynes under­stood the essence of Bowie: for you sim­ply can’t make a film of his life, you can only recre­ate the Bowie char­ac­ter of that time. A biopic begs for authen­tic­i­ty, but there was noth­ing authen­tic about Bowie. There was only per­for­mance and spec­ta­cle. And the beau­ty of under­stand­ing Bowie’s work is find­ing the authen­tic­i­ty with­in the performance.

Per­haps Bri­an Slade, para­phras­ing Oscar Wilde, said it best: Man is least him­self when he talks in his own per­son. Give him a mask and he’ll tell you the truth.”

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