Nashville (1975 film)

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Nashville
Image:NashvilleDVDcover.jpg
Directed by Robert Altman
Written by Joan Tewkesbury
Starring Ned Beatty
Keith Carradine
Geraldine Chaplin
Scott Glenn
Shelley Duvall
Produced by Robert Altman
Distributed by Paramount Pictures
Release date 11 June, 1975 (premiere)
Runtime 159 min.
Language English
Budget USD$2,000,000 (estimated)
IMDb page

Nashville is a 1975 film which mixes themes of U.S. presidential politics with those of the country music and gospel music businesses in Nashville, Tennessee. The large ensemble cast features David Arkin, Barbara Baxley, Ned Beatty, Karen Black, Ronee Blakley, Keith Carradine, Geraldine Chaplin, Allen Garfield, Henry Gibson, Scott Glenn, Jeff Goldblum, David Hayward, Lily Tomlin, Gwen Welles and Keenan Wynn.

The movie was written by Joan Tewkesbury and directed by Robert Altman. It has the trademark Altman overlapping dialogue and huge casts. The actors and actresses were required to write and perform their own songs live for the movie, as opposed to the usual "playback" method of performing songs on film.

It won an Oscar for Best Music, Song (Keith Carradine for "I'm Easy") and was nominated in the Best Supporting Actress (Ronee Blakley and Lily Tomlin), Best Director and Best Picture categories. The film has been deemed "culturally significant" by the Library of Congress and selected for preservation in the United States National Film Registry. Carradine performed "I'm Easy" at the famed (and, as of 2005, still-extant) performance venue the "Exit/In". Most signficant for the film itself, however, is its theme piece, heard sporadically throughout, and then brought to a climax at the end: "It Don't Worry Me", the refrain of which is clearly the unifying metatheme of the movie itself: "It don't worry me, it don't worry me. You may say that I ain't free, but it don't worry me."

Many of the characters in the film are based on real country music figures: Henry Gibson's Haven Hamilton is based on Porter Wagoner; Ronee Blakely's Barbara Jean is based on Loretta Lynn; the black country singer Tommy Brown (played by Timothy Brown) is based on Charley Pride; and the feuding folk trio is based on Peter, Paul and Mary. The 1992 presidential campaign of H. Ross Perot was felt by many to be eerily similar to the campaign of the "Replacement Party" and its candidate in this film, Hal Phillip Walker, the fictional candidate even having a voice remarkably similar to that of Perot's.

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