Screened as part of NZIFF 2003

Standing in the Shadows of Motown 2002

Directed by Paul Justman

USA In English
108 minutes 35mm

Director

Producers

Sandy Passman
,
Allan Slutsky
,
Paul Justman

Screenplay

Walter Dallas
,
Ntozake Shange

Photography

Doug Milsome
,
Lon Stratton

Editor

Anne Erikson

Narrator

Andre Braugher

With

The Funk Brothers
,
Richard ‘Pistol’ Allen
,
Jack ‘Black Jack’ Ashford
,
Bob Babbitt
,
Johnny Griffith
,
Joe Hunter
,
Uriel Jones
,
Joe Messina
,
Eddie ‘Chank’ Willis
,
Benny ‘Papa Zita’ Benjamin
,
James ‘Igor’ Jamerson
,
Eddie ‘Bongo’ Brown
,
Earl ‘Chunk of Funk’ Van Dyke
,
Robert White
,
Joan Osborne
,
Gerald Levert
,
Me'Shell Ndegeocello
,
Bootsy Collins
,
Ben Harper
,
Chaka Khan
,
Montel Jordan
,
Tom Scott

Festivals

Toronto, Vancouver, London 2002

Elsewhere

“You didn’t know that you wanted to see a movie about the Funk Brothers, but, believe me, you do. You’ve probably never heard of the Funk Brothers, and neither had I. But anybody who loves Motown (and who in his right mind doesn’t?) has heard their music over and over. Anybody who lived through the 60s danced to the Funk Brothers’ beat. These unsung heroes were the sound of Motown; it was their grooves behind Smokey Robinson and the Miracles, Marvin Gaye, the Marvelettes, the Supremes, Martha and the Vandellas, the Four Tops and Stevie Wonder… Seven of the Funk Brothers have survived to tell the tale – and they are wonderful storytellers, particularly percussionist-vibraphonist Jack Ashford and piano player Joe Hunter… Using their arrangements, they take to the stage in Detroit to perform more than a dozen classics with singers Joan Osborne (“What Becomes of the Brokenhearted”), Ben Harper (“I Heard It Through the Grapevine”), Me’Shell Ndegéocello (“You’ve Really Got a Hold on Me”), Gerald Levert (“Shotgun”) and others. These dynamite numbers reinforce a point made in the movie: with these guys laying down the grooves, just about anybody could have made these songs hits.” — David Ansen, Newsweek 

“Exhilarating… The near giddiness with which seasoned, no-bullshit musicians, producers and songwriters analyze and pay tribute to the music and its creators is contagious; their joy as both fans and students leaps off the screen.” — Ernest Hardy, LA Weekly