Big Star: Nothing Can Hurt Me main backdrop
Big Star: Nothing Can Hurt Me main poster

Big Star: Nothing Can Hurt Me

Visit website

7.0/10 • 27

2013-07-031h 40m

Documentary

Big Star: Nothing Can Hurt Me is a feature-length documentary film about the dismal commercial failure, subsequent massive critical acclaim, and enduring legacy of pop music's greatest cult phenomenon, Big Star.

Directors
Drew DeNicola, Olivia Mori

Top Billed Cast

View Credits
  1. Rick Clark

    Rick Clark

    Himself

  2. Jon Auer

    Jon Auer

    Himself

  3. Chris Bell

    Chris Bell

    Himself (archive footage)

  4. Alex Chilton

    Alex Chilton

    Himself (archive footage)

  5. Andy Hummel

    Andy Hummel

    Himself (archive footage)

Reviews1

View Reviews
CRCulver Avatar

CRCulver

Sep 2, 2018

8/10

This is a 2012 documentary about the eponymous 1970s pop-rock band from Memphis that saw few sales in spite of enormous critical acclaim, but went on to become a cult phenomenon and inspire some great bands in the decades that followed. The documentary was made without the participation of Big Star's surly frontman Alex Chilton (and it was completed following Chilton's untimely death), but it does feature interviews with bassist Andy Hummel, drummer Jody Stephens, and the musicians brought on when Chilton announced a new Big Star in the 1990s. Furthermore, producer John Fry appears throughout the documentary and appears to have had a bigger role in the Big Star story than many listeners might have imagined. The film begins with the Memphis context of the late 1960s/early 1970s. Chilton, who had already had a chart hit with the band The Box Top and toured the country, comes home and starts a new band with Chris Bell. The process of recording Big Star's first album "#1 Record" is explained in some depth, from how the band used the available studio resources to where the iconic cover art came from. We learn how Bell splits after the first album, has a nervous breakdown and flirts with evangelical Christianity, tries to make it as a musician in England and cuts the legendary single "You and Your Sister/I am the Cosmos", and finally dies in 1978 of a car crash at only 27 years old. There are poignant interviews with Bell’s older brother and sister-in-law, but part of Bell's angst was his homosexuality, and everyone is uncomfortable even approaching this subject. The documentary continues through the recording of Big Star's second ("Radio City") and third ("Third/Sister Lovers") records, followed by the ultimate breakdown of relations between Jody Stephens and Alex Chilton and the end of Big Star. There's some brief coverage of Chilton's solo career through the 1980s and the reformed Big Star in the 1990s and early millennium. There are some brief comments from later, perhaps more famous musicians that express an eternal debt to Big Star, like Teenage Fanclub and Mike Mills of R.E.M. This is one of those documentaries that, to a degree, expects viewers to already know quite a bit about the band in question, making it somewhat frustrating for those who know Big Star's name and legacy but not so much the band's career and arc. It is mentioned that #1 Record sold poorly through label problems, but it's as if the viewer is already supposed to know that it was poorly distributed. It is mentioned briefly that Chris Bell died in a car crash, but with little detail. And there are some aspects of the production that seem mystery. For example, why does Jody Stephens have such a bad attitude throughout his interviews? Still, I enjoyed Big Star: Nothing Can Hurt Me overall. So many rock documentaries interview people who exploded into stardom, moved to la-la-land like California and seem to live on another planet compared to non-celebrities. Here, on the other hand, it's amazing just what ordinary southern Americans these people are, who clearly have some good memories of their youth but never really went for celebrity culture. They could be one's neighbours or the people you pass in the supermarket. That's not to say that they aren't interesting, as they include some quirky characters like the affably campy John King and producer Jim Dickinson's elderly but eternally young widow.

Media

  • Big Star: Nothing Can Hurt Me poster
  • Big Star: Nothing Can Hurt Me poster
  • Big Star: Nothing Can Hurt Me poster
  • Big Star: Nothing Can Hurt Me poster

Recommendations

  • No Backdrop

    Plumbing Is a 'Pipe'

    6.7

  • Velvet Buzzsaw main backdrop

    Velvet Buzzsaw

    5.4

  • Contracted: Phase II main backdrop

    Contracted: Phase II

    5.3

  • The Latin Explosion: A New America main backdrop

    The Latin Explosion: A New America

    8.1

  • Team Thor: Part 2 main backdrop

    Team Thor: Part 2

    7.0

  • Justice League vs. the Fatal Five main backdrop

    Justice League vs. the Fatal Five

    6.8

  • Game of Thrones: The Last Watch main backdrop

    Game of Thrones: The Last Watch

    7.1

  • Ben 10: Secret of the Omnitrix main backdrop

    Ben 10: Secret of the Omnitrix

    7.4

  • The Emperor of Paris main backdrop

    The Emperor of Paris

    6.3

  • The Paper Tigers main backdrop

    The Paper Tigers

    6.8

  • The Son main backdrop

    The Son

    5.4

  • LEGO Frozen Northern Lights main backdrop

    LEGO Frozen Northern Lights

    6.6

  • Noblesse: The Beginning of Destruction main backdrop

    Noblesse: The Beginning of Destruction

    6.7

  • Dead Awake main backdrop

    Dead Awake

    5.2

  • Room for Murder main backdrop

    Room for Murder

    7.5

  • Express Kidnapping main backdrop

    Express Kidnapping

    5.5

  • Teen Titans Go! To the Movies main backdrop

    Teen Titans Go! To the Movies

    7.2

  • God's Not Dead 2 main backdrop

    God's Not Dead 2

    6.1

  • Xico's Journey main backdrop

    Xico's Journey

    6.6

  • Cars 3 main backdrop

    Cars 3

    6.9

Status
Released
Original Language
English
Budget
--
Revenue
--
Keywords
rock music