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Directed by Stephen Wooley
Screen Media Films LLC
4 stars
It’s hard to remember a time when the Rolling Stones
weren’t four fossils in leather pants with titles in the peerage and
three-digit ticket prices. In “Stoned,” Stephen Wooley’s directorial
debut, he recounts the hedonistic early days of the Stones and the
rapid rise and precipitous fall of founding member and guitarist Brian
Jones, played by Leo Gregory (“Green Street Hooligans”).
Jones’ short life was a rock and roll archetype, perfect
fodder for a movie full of beautiful women, glamorous drugs, and
destructive arguments. “Stoned” is set in the final tumultuous months
of Jones’ life, a time during which he withdrew into the private world
of his Sussex mansion. He essentially abandons the band for the
companionship of his girlfriend, Anna Wohlin (Tuva Novotny, “Bang Bang
Orangutang”) and the renovator of his house, Frank Thorogood (Paddy
Considene, “Cinderella Man”). This period of Jones’ self-imposed exile
came to an abrupt halt when he was mysteriously found floating in his
pool, dead.
The characters of Mick Jagger, Keith Richards, and the rest
of the Rolling Stones are peripheral in the film, appearing mainly in
flashbacks to the band’s early days. They only appear once in the
film’s present, when they arrive at Jones’ house to fire him for his
unreliable and uncontrollable behavior.
Instead, the film’s minimal plot centers on the alternately
tense and tender relationship between Jones and Thorogood. Thorogood is
the central figure of the last phase of Jones’ life: his constant
companion, a witness to the unraveling that led to his split with the
band, and possibly his killer.
This relationship unfolds against the carefully constructed
backdrop of the 1960s. Wooley seems as interested in evocations of the
era as he is in story telling. The film is just about as sex-obsessed
and drug-crazed as Jones was—most of the characters are on their way to
or from nakedness during most of the film, and time passes in
psychedelic montages.
Unfortunately, these scenes quickly begin to blur together.
There are only so many depictions of debauchery that we can take before
we grow as frustrated by Jones’ antics as Jagger and Richards did.
Jones himself fits into the nostalgic that characterizes the
entire film. He is an embodiment of lost innocence, a figure whom
Wooley depicts as boyish even as his skin grows leathery and the
wrinkles on his face deepen. Jones’ home is the former residence of
A.A. Milne, and he radiates childish joy as he wanders the gardens,
thinking about the residents of Pooh Corner. Wooley loves these moments
of vulnerability, and Gregory shows Jones’ emotional neediness well:
it’s easy to see why Jones always gets a second chance. Although
Considene appears somewhat stiff as Thorogood, this only serves to
heighten the contrast between the flighty, flamboyant rock star and the
reserved and socially awkward builder.
The camera focuses so tightly on Jones and Thorogood that the
female actresses fade into the background. Monet Mazur
(“Monster-in-Law”) as Anita Pallenberg, mistress of many band members,
and Novotny both take decent turns, but neither endows her leggy blonde
character with much individuality.
The film’s main shortcoming is its limping soundtrack. In the
time period during which the film covers, Jones participated in the
sessions for “Aftermath,” “Beggar’s Banquet,” and “Let it Bleed,” three
of the greatest albums in rock and roll history. Unfortunately, none of
that music appears in the film and its absence leaves a gaping hole.
BOTTOM LINE: With an intense dramatic narrative and plenty of
rock and roll glamour, “Stoned” achieves a rare balance of substance
and style.
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