The reggae superstar is the subject of an epic documentary.
It’s more than 30 years since Bob Marley died of cancer at the horribly young age of 36, and he has become more famous and influential in the decades since his passing than he ever was in his lifetime.This point is made quite subtly and hearteningly at the very end of the documentary “Marley,” by Kevin Macdonald (who also directed “Touching the Void” and “One Day in September” and the dramatic feature “The Last King of Scotland”). After copiously detailing the life and times of his subject, Macdonald takes us on a journey to every continent of the planet to watch as a pied array of singers, professional and not, perform Marley’s “Get Up, Stand Up” and “One Love.”
Those two songs indicate nicely the range of Marley’s work and spirit: He was at once a revolutionary outsider preaching fiery justice and a holy fool imploring humanity to embrace its best angels -- and always with great hooks and an infectiously tight band. It’s no wonder that Marley’s image has taken on the same sort of universal currency as those of such diverse icons as Elvis Presley and Che Guevara: he is both a musical lodestar and a symbol of political aspiration. And his influence transcends borders, cultures and even generations in a way that very few artists have ever imagined.
The coda aside, “Marley” doesn’t track the impact of Marley as carefully as it does the days and deeds of the man. The film is built around interviews with a stunning array of sources. Marley’s mother, wife, children, lovers, bandmates, teachers, business associates, half-blood relations and so on all appear: a complete who’s-who of his life.
There are chats with Marley himself, piles of photos and film clips (including cellphone-quality images of Marley and Stevie Wonder performing in 1975), tawdry and frightening headlines (an affair with Miss World, an assassination attempt), music biz intrigues, political tussles, family complications, and Kremlin-like maneuvers within his bands. You learn about the rise of ska and reggae music, the roots and meanings of Rastafarianism, the political and cultural climate and history of Jamaica. It’s a thoroughly satisfying, full-bodied portrait.
Marley’s life has been the subject of perhaps a half-dozen aborted feature film projects over the years, and this film gives us an idea of why: there are almost too many irresistible tangents, compelling songs, and colorful characters. “Marley” runs nearly two-and-a-half hours without having to establish dramatic characters or expand small incidents into structured scenes. It may, finally, be the best and last word on the man, his music and his myth that we ever get on film -- an estimable achievement in itself.
(144 min., PG-13, Hollywood Theatre, Living Room Theaters) Grade: B-plus