Friday, March 20, 2026

A Star is Born (1976)

And this week's Friday night movie has been... A Star is Born (1976)!

Original image located here. Accessed 20th March 2026

AKA: The one with Barbra Streisand in it.

Let us, for a moment, go back to that question I posed last week: Given that Hollywood has produced four versions of this movie, what is it about A Star is Born that keeps bringing people back to it?
One likely reason is that it can easily be adapted to fit the times it was made: If the 1937 original was a snapshot of the Golden Era of Hollywood, and 1954 version came out at a time when musicals were popular, then this one brings something it's own to the table: It ditches the movie approach for one about music. In particular rock music and the industry attached. 

It may be a new approach but let's be honest here: This is all Streisand's show. She stars, is the executive producer, used her own clothes for her wardrobe (as the credits seem eager to point out) and has her then-hairdresser-turned-boyfriend Jon Peters as producer (well before his obsession with mechanical spiders). It would be easy to say this is her bid for some credibility/An Oscar, taking some tried-and-tested material and bringing her own stamp on it - but the question is, does it work? 

When I was a young lad in the nineties, I had a view of the seventies as being one borne of derision: There were hippies everywhere, the hair was bad, the fashion was worse and a lot of the music was over-produced and over-bearing. Granted such a perception was a product of a narrow one but I bring this up because this movie does nothing to challenge said perception. 
Sure the source material does translate well into a music environment, sure Kris Kristofferson plays the role of 'washed up and self destructive' rock star well, sure Streisand does indeed get chances to flex her vocal prowess (the final eight minutes being of particular note). But does this work as a whole? 
Honestly I'm torn here: For every strength this movie has, a weakness emerges: The Oreos. Streisand not quite cutting it is a rocker type. It's meandering nature. The aforementioned aesthetic. 

Still, there's always next week.....

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