Tracker Pixel for Entry

Forever in my life

Cinema | June 8th, 2016

The third theatrically released feature starring Prince, as well as his second directorial effort, “Sign o’ the Times” remains a concert film par excellence.

The movie’s curious production history has been marked by stories that the vast majority of the visual content was captured at Paisley Park, when footage from shows in Rotterdam and Antwerp didn’t pass muster. Message boards on Prince fansites turn up spirited discussions addressing the movie’s questionable status as a “live” artifact versus a lip-synched and overdubbed facsimile of a gig, but the theatrical presentation of the songs, linked as they are by a series of thin thematic sketches and the inclusion of David Hogan’s clip for “U Got the Look,” enhance rather than detract from the fantasia.

Showing on 234 screens in late November of 1987 following an October premiere in Detroit, “Sign o’ the Times” failed to gain much box office traction. Unsurprisingly, its second life on cable and home video cemented its status, even though the film has never been reissued on DVD or Blu-ray in America.

With uncredited directorial assistance from “Purple Rain” helmer Albert Magnoli and outstanding production design by Leroy Bennett, the movie has become a go-to document of Prince’s fault line-rupturing command of stage, instruments, and fellow musicians – praise be to Sheila E.’s work and Prince’s “pretty good for a girl” wink.

Since its debut, Prince followers have obsessed over the film’s set list, comparing the movie to the album and lamenting the omission of “The Ballad of Dorothy Parker,” “Starfish and Coffee,” “Strange Relationship,” and “Adore,” the only four songs from the double LP that did not appear in one form or another in the film. And while a truncated “Little Red Corvette” segues into “Housequake,” the limitations of the movie’s 85 minute running time meant axing at least a half dozen earlier songs – including several from “Purple Rain” and “Parade” – that had been played on the “Sign o’ the Times” tour. Rumors suggest that film had been shot and edited for those tracks, but arguably, the movie works even better in its streamlined incarnation.

In his recent retrospective on the film, Nathan Rabin highlights the amazing “If I Was Your Girlfriend,” recognizing that Prince “contemplates an emotional intimacy that exists only between women and ponders whether this intimacy might be more powerful than sexual intimacy.” That incisive description alludes to what Rabin will go on to describe as Prince’s masterful range of soul-baring emotion, a characteristic of “Sign o’ the Times” that makes it the equal of “Purple Rain” and allows fans to select any number of songs as the movie’s pinnacle.

With no disrespect to the Mariana Trench-deep groove of “Forever in My Life,” I remember choking up to “I Could Never Take the Place of Your Man” the first time I saw the movie, marveling at the differences between the screen performance and the album version.

Following the artist’s well-established pattern, “Sign o’ the Times” continues to showcase the fascinating truce between Prince’s libidinous and eroticized sex machine ethos (bear witness to his ongoing choreographed interplay with dancer Cat Glover!) and his increasingly present spiritual and social concerns.

The title song and “The Cross” are the first and last numbers, representing that seriousness of purpose but also sandwiching the funk and sweat and flesh like cookie halves hugging a Double Stuf dollop of sweet creme.

In his monograph on “Sign o’ the Times,” Michaelangelo Matos identifies “Sign” and “Cross” as twins through the kinship of their desolate imagery and their glimmers of hope. Matos and the movie have the sequencing right: open with “Sign,” and instead of record closers “It’s Gonna Be a Beautiful Night” and “Adore,” finish with “The Cross” and its “ethereal harmonies that pop up near the end to sound like angels rising out of the concrete.”

Recently in:

Summer is a tough time for families who depend on free or reduced-price school meals, so YMCA of the Northern Sky will provide nutritious, no-cost meals to kids 18 and under through August 26. Breakfast and lunch are available…

By Jeff Armstrong Despite a history dating back many centuries and a reputation as fierce resistance fighters, the Kurds remain the largest stateless nation in the world. Divided by colonial post-WWI borders and subsumed into four…

June 6-7StatewideYou grab a line and I’ll grab a pole — and if you’re a North Dakota resident, you can head on down to your favorite fishing hole, no license needed (for this weekend, anyway). All other rules still apply…

By John Strand It took us over 30 years for us to reach out and ask for your help. The High Plains Reader has always been subscription free and paywall free. Our content has — and always will be — free to access for all of our…

By Ed RaymondCongratulations! A world record held by Trumplican Party and NRA!During the Minnesota Legislature’s discussion of gun controls, Republican State Senator Drew Roach of Farmington said he would never ban assault…

By Rick Gionrickgion@gmail.com Holiday wine shopping shouldn’t have to be complicated. But unfortunately it can cause unneeded anxiety due to an overabundance of choices. Don’t fret my friends, we once again have you covered…

By Rick GionThe scarfing of canned fish and seafood products by online food influencer types is hard to miss on social media these days. Some of the consumed morsels range from exquisite to downright nasty. However, there are many…

By Bryce Vincent Haugen The curtain has come down on Jade Presents. Fargo-Moorhead’s largest event promoter has brought thousands of shows — more than 150 per year — and hundreds of artists to the area over the past 36 years. On…

By Greg Carlson The feature directorial debut of established internet phenomenon and entertainment hyphenate Hayley Kiyoko — known unironically to her fans as “Lesbian Jesus” — carries with it a curious backstory becoming more…

By Jacinta Zens I recently sat down for a chat with ceramicist Louie Albertson, Clay and Studio Program Manager at the Plains Art Museum. Before the interview, I had the pleasure of getting to know him a bit as a colleague when I…

Saturday, January 31, 6:30-9 p.m.Transfiguration Fitness, 764 34th St. N., Unit P, FargoAn enchanting evening celebrating movement and creativity in a staff-student showcase. This is a family-friendly event showcasing pole, aerial…

By Annie Prafckeannieprafcke@gmail.com AUSTIN, Texas – As a Chinese-American, connecting to my culture through food is essential, and no dish brings me back to my mother’s kitchen quite like hotdish. Yes, you heard me right –…

By Sabrina Hornungsabrina@hpr1.comNew Jamestown Brewery Serves up Local FlavorThere’s something delicious brewing out here on the prairie and it just so happens to be the newest brewery west of the Red River and east of the…

By Eli Liverani It was in the mid-90s when I heard of homeopathy for the first time. I was at university, and it was through word of mouth. Some friends were seeking homeopathy to solve minor health issues, such as weight gain,…

January 31, 11 a.m. - 6 p.m.Viking Ship Park, 202 1st Ave. N., Moorhead2026 marks 10 years of frosty fun! Enjoy sauna sessions with Log the Sauna, try Snowga (yoga in the snow), take a guided snowshoe nature hike, listen to live…

Chris M. Stoner I was recently dismissed from my role as drag show director and emcee for Dakota OutRight, a role I had been fulfilling for more than two decades. The reason given? My political commentary during shows, while…