DMovies - Your platform for thought-provoking cinema

Swan Song

Udo Kier shines as a flamboyant queen in her twilight years in a small American town, in this endearing drama loosely based on a real story - now on BFI Player and Amazon Prime

Pat Pitsenbarger (Udo Kier) was a real person the director Todd Stephens’s small hometown of Sandusky. He is described as “the Liberace of Sandusky”. The film, however, is a mostly fictionalised version of the last years of Pitsenbarger’s life. We first meet him in a nursing home. He has had a stroke at some point, but his energy for life is not diminished at all. A fellow resident in the nursing home dies, and in her will, there is a paid provision for him to do her hair and makeup for the funeral, as Pitsenbarger was a hairdresser in his golden years.

Pat revisits all the significant places of his life before he gets to the funeral home. Thematically, it is not dissimilar to David Lynch’s The Straight Story (1999). There is even a glorious scene where Pitsenbarger is driving an electronic wheelchair in the middle of the road, not having a care in the world, decked out in a fedora and a mint-green pantsuit, and puffing away on one of his beloved More cigarettes.

Udo Kier shines – if you had almost any other actor it just wouldn’t work. The flamboyant nature of the role could end up being a caricature in the hands of another actor. Kier has done so many different roles in so many films, but rarely was rarely given a complex lead role such as this. It’s a shame that the film is at times a little too syrupy for its own good, and has an ending you can see coming from the outer reaches of space. It touches on the changing nature of gay culture, with gay bars being on the verge of closing with the advent of hook-up apps. This is a theme Udo certainly can relate to, he was Rainer Werner Fassbinder’s lover when they were both teen street hustlers in the Frankfurt of the 1960s. There is a very telling line that Pitsenbarger utters to an old friend in what seems like the last remaining gay bar in Sandusky: “I wouldn’t even know how to be gay anymore.”

Overall it’s a good showcase for Udo Kier.The movie’s quirkiness is quite endearing, even if it’s far too predictable. The dramatic scenes are effective, especially the one early on in the film where he visits the grave of an old lover whom he lost to Aids. It’s not going to set the world on fire, but Swan Song shows a version of Middle America that rarely appears on screen, far more tolerant than most would expect

There is another film called Swan Song starring Mahershala Ali and Glenn Close coming to Apple TV+ later in this year, so when this comes out, I wouldn’t be surprised if it’s retitled.

Swan Song premiered at SXSW. On BFI Player and Amazon Prime in March 2023.


By Ian Schultz - 30-03-2021

Ian Schultz is a film writer based in Leeds, where he runs Psychotronic Cinema. He has been writing about films for about eight years, with articles and reviews appearing in Little White Lies and Live...

DMovies Poll

Are the Oscars dirty enough for DMovies?

View Results

Loading ... Loading ...

Most Read

Forget Friday the 13th, Paranormal Activity and the [Read More...]
Just a few years back, finding a film [Read More...]
A lot of British people would rather forget [Read More...]
Pigs might fly. And so Brexit might happen. [Read More...]
Sexual diversity is at the very heart of [Read More...]
Films quotes are very powerful not just because [Read More...]

Read More

Paul’s 27 Dirtiest Movies of All Time – Letter B: The ‘Burbs

 

Paul Risker - 07-05-2024

Mysterious new neighbours set paranoia loose in a peaceful cul-de-sac, as grown men let their inner child out to play - wacky American comedy is the third one of Paul's 27 Dirtiest Movies of All Time [Read More...]

The War Between

Deborah Correa
2024

Paul Risker - 05-05-2024

American Civil War drama takes viewers on an emotional rollercoaster; the cinematic journey is a little rough but not without signs of promise [Read More...]

Lenita – Traces of a Lady

Dácio Pinheiro
2024

Victor Fraga - 02-05-2024

Finely crafted documentary rescues the work and the personal history of a pioneering however long-forgotten fashion-photographer-turned-horse-breeder from Brazil [Read More...]

Facebook Comment

Website Comments

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *