Young
at Heart
Starring:
Bob Cilman, Fred Knittle, Eileen Hall
Directed by: Stephen Walker (“Waiting for
Harvey”)
By Kiko
Martinez
Anyone
considered to be in the golden years of their lives
would be lucky to have as much spunk and personality as
the subjects in the heartwarming and heartbreaking
documentary “Young At Heart.” It will lift you up long
after you leave the theater.
On the
surface, “Young at Heart” is the true story of a group
of senior citizens based out of Northampton, MA, who
sing in a chorus where most of the songs performed are
not the typical lyrics you would think 70, 80 and 90
year olds would be interested in. From Sonic Youth to
Coldplay to the Ramones, these elderly men and women
find joy in coming together and learning new songs to
sing across the U.S. and in Europe.
While we
learn about some of the members of the chorus during the
moving documentary, we also find about why the choir
members, some of whom have overcome tremendous health
issues during the course of their lives, keep coming
back to memorize and perfect songs their great-great
grandchildren probably have in their IPods. You’re made
of stone if throughout the film’s 107 minutes you are
not either smiling or in a twisted ball of emotion.
It’s nothing
that director Stephen Walker really does to pull any
heartstrings. He doesn’t drown out any of the drama by
becoming overly sentimental. Anything you feel from the
film all comes from the choir members themselves. They
are the life and blood of this movie and for good
reason. Walker actually slows down these vibrant
oldies-but-goodies by writing the documentary a bit too
much like a human interest story that could be found in
a local newspaper. He skims surfaces but manages to fall
back on the incredible hearts of his singers.
One of the
most touching storylines "Young at Heart" follows is
about an elderly man named Fred Knittle and his special
one-time return to the choir to sing a duet with a
friend. The song choir director Bob Cilman chooses for
them is Coldplay's "Fix You." It's without a doubt one
of the great single film scenes of this year when put
into context.
At it's
core, "Young at Heart" is about finding something in
life that you can live for. It's about not letting
something as natural as old age dictate your ability to
survive mind, body and soul. It's a movie about the
harmony in music and the spirit. Grade: B