WALK THE LINE
USA 2005, 136 minutes
Director: James Mangold
Starring: Joaquim Phoenix and Reese Witherspoon
Awards and Nominations include:
Oscars
Win Reese
Witherspoon (Best Actress in a Leading Role)
Nominations Joaquim Phoenix (Best Actor in a Leading Role)
Golden Globes
Win Reese
Witherspoon (Best Actress in a Leading Role – Musical or Comedy)
Win Joaquim Phoenix
(Best Actor in a Leading Role – Musical or Comedy)
BAFTA
Win Reese
Witherspoon (Best Performance by Actress in a Leading Role)
Nominations Joaquim Phoenix (Best Performance by Actor in a Leading Role)
Total of 28 wins and 24 nominations
Walk
the Line follows the life of American country music legend Johnny Cash from
his dirt-poor childhood in rural Arkansas up
to the high spot of his career in 1968 when he performed a live gig at Folsom
Prison California . The film begins with the preparations for the
Folsom Prison gig and the story then unfolds in an extended flashback as Cash
fingers a circular saw in the prison workshop: Cash was traumatised by the
tragic death of his elder brother as a result of an accident with a circular
saw and was made to feel guilty over it by a bitter father who denied him
affection, respect and encouragement.
The main theme of the story is
Cash’s gradual discovery of his talent as an artist, from buying his first
guitar whilst in the US
air force until he finally takes up a musical career after switching from
gospel singing to county music. However
there is also a powerful secondary theme about Cash’s lack of self-esteem and
his need to prove himself in order to impress his unyielding father, and it is
this that leads to degradation and despair resulting from his drinking,
drug-taking and womanising. Finally Cash
is saved by the love of a good woman, June Carter, whose whole life had been
spent in the country music business.
Cash and Carter were married in 1968 and remained together for the rest
of their lives: they both died in 2003.
It was not until film-makers
started searching for an “authentic” America
in the 1960s that Hollywood
started taking country music seriously.
There was country music on the soundtracks of both Bonnie and Clyde and Five
Easy Pieces, and in the 1970s Robert Altman’s Nashville
used the country music scene to cast a critical eye over the country as it
prepared for its bicentennial. Since
then there have been biopics of both Loretta Lynn (Coalminer’s Daughter) and Patsy Kline (Sweet Dreams). However
neither Lynn
not Kline ever enjoyed the success or achieved the iconic status of Johnny
Cash.
Here's the trailer: