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Something to watch tonight: Thursday 12 October

By October 12, 2023No Comments

Folklore: The Long Pond Sessions (Swift, 2020) is streaming on Disney+

Taylor Swift owns the movies this weekend.

When she announced that the film ver­sion of her Eras Tour was going into cinemas this week­end almost every oth­er pic­ture headed for the hills. My loc­al mul­ti­plex has 12 ses­sions of Eras on Saturday alone. It’s a juggernaut.

If you don’t want to recre­ate a noisy sta­di­um spec­tac­u­lar but still want a fix of Swiftiana (or maybe just see what the fuss is about) the doc­u­ment­ary Folklore: The Long Pond Sessions is on Disney+.

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During lock­down Swift – unable to tour – wrote and recor­ded a new record, Folklore and then she made a film of her per­form­ing acous­tic ver­sions of those songs. I wrote about it for RNZ back in December 2020:

With pan­dem­ic pre­cau­tions still in place, she went to Long Pond Studio in rur­al upstate New York with her two song­writ­ing col­lab­or­at­ors Jack Antonoff and Aaron Dessner and a tiny crew (so small that the cam­er­as were all oper­ated by remote con­trol and Swift her­self is cred­ited with makeup as well as direction).

Over a couple of even­ings, the three-piece (with one not­able excep­tion) cre­ate beau­ti­fully sparse ver­sions of all 18 songs from the Folklore record, inter­spersed with con­ver­sa­tion between them about the songs and how they came about. Swift is obvi­ously a very thought­ful writer and col­lab­or­at­or but, if I’m hon­est, I could have done with a bit less of that, espe­cially as the res­ult is over two hours long.

The high­light is the duet between Swift and Bön Iver’s Justin Vernon (Vernon join­ing in from his home stu­dio in Wisconsin) duet­ting on the song “Exile” through an outlaw’s bandana that might be a Covid-related mask or a ges­ture towards anonym­ity. In any case, it’s wonderful.

I’m not a huge fol­low­er of Swift but this film is great, and I think I would buy these ver­sions of the songs over the ori­gin­al album.

Reader, I ended up doing just that.



That review for RNZ fea­tured three music movies that came out around the same time, includ­ing Bruce Springsteen’s Letter to You (Apple TV+) and David Byrne’s American Utopia (dir­ec­ted by Spike Lee) which at the time was on Neon but is now a digit­al rent­al from Apple or Google.