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10 Essential Cinematic AntiheroesRunning a brisk hour long, this documentary combines footage from the band's performances at Paris' Stade de France, Montreal's Bell Centre, and their headlining gig on the Pyramid Stage at England's Glastonbury Music Festival. Combining these various gigs is a great idea for a number of reasons, and not only because we get these nifty, Google Maps-on-acid flashes where the camera zooms into some new location through a fog of zippy haze, but because we get to see things like Rihanna show up in Paris to perform a rousing rendition of the beautiful, brilliant "Princess of China," and watch how the band's vibe and energy subtly changes as their location shifts.
In between songs, there are interviews with various band members, which aren't exactly insightful but do allow you into the creative process a little bit, and add to the aw-shucks, these-guys-are-great vibe. When lead singer and band leader Chris Martin, who's married to a woman who, in the movies, is married to Tony Stark, bashfully says, "It's exciting when you're 15 and you throw a party and people show up," well, it's hard not to crack a smile. They all seem to be genuinely thrilled to be doing what they're doing, and that positivity is palpable in the live show.
The songs themselves sound even bigger and more universally rousing than do on record. There's something about hearing an audience sing along to a song like "Hurts Like Heaven" that gives the it an added scope and makes you appreciate the Coldplay machine in action – when they were writing these songs in some cramped English recording studio, you can't help but think they knew that 30,000 screaming, crying, dancing fans would be singing along to it one day. These songs are massive; built for stadium-sized sing-alongs. And while, honestly, nobody needs to ever hear "Yellow" again, watching them perform it in the context of this documentary, which is nothing if not boundlessly enthusiastic, brings the song to life once more. The band remains tirelessly professional, and each one of them is both a skilled musician and an electric performer, embracing the shtick with real energy and commitment (nothing's worse than seeing a pop star phone it in). And yes, "Fix You" still tugs on the old heartstrings.
Director Paul Dugdale gets into the spirit of the Mylo Xyloto Tour by occasionally "drawing" squiggles of bright paint on the screen, which adds to the outrageous, overstuffed nature of the experience. But he also knows when to tone it down and let the on-stage visuals speak for themselves. When "Paradise" starts subtly, with a darkened stage that's eventually brightened by glow-in-the-dark graffiti, it's striking enough without any additional flourishes. If anything, the documentary should be longer, should capture more of the live experience, to better replicate the experience of watching the band onstage. But that's a minor quibble. At the end of "Coldplay Live 2012," even a cursory understanding of what it's like to watch Coldplay live is better than nothing at all. Wristbands not included. [B+]
"Coldplay Live 2012" is in theaters for one night only on Tuesday, November 13th. It will air on EPIX staring this weekend. It arrives on home video and CD on November 19th.
11 Comments
Joey | November 15, 2012 4:48 PM
I have seen a lot of great concerts - Pink Floyd, Grateful Dead (many), Led Zeppelin, The Who, The Stones, U2... the list goes on and on. And yet I can honestly say that I have never seen a better show than Mylo Xyloto. I liked it so much that I went back 2X. Music spot on (way better live), mind blowing visuals and none of the snotty "I'm a rock star" attitude that so many others project. Most bands act like we are lucky to be allowed to attend. Coldplay leaves it all on the stage and makes it clear that they feel lucky that we allow them to perform. Don't knock it if you didn't see it for yourself!
Jake | November 12, 2012 10:58 PM
U2's most recent tour, $750m gross, Coldplay's $148m.
cirkusfolk | November 12, 2012 9:25 PM
U guys r whack. Of course U2 and the Rolling Stones r the biggest bands in the world but Coldplay is about as big as a 12 year old band can be. Who is bigger but not older I ask you? Anyway, u can hate their music I suppose but I like them and was looking forward to this release. Now I'm bummed though since u say its only an hour! There has to be more to it on the bluray which ironically enough comes out on the same day as Led Zeppelins bluray of their reunion concert from 5 years ago.
DG | November 12, 2012 3:54 PM
Come on guys no one gives a shit about Coldplay
Derek | November 12, 2012 3:47 PM
Are you kidding? Coldplay? Fuck this.
Christian | November 12, 2012 3:37 PM
Biggest band? That's U2 or The Stones, man!