Film

Bloodlight and Bami, review – a glimpse behind the mask of Grace Jones

Sophie Fiennes’ bold and fascinating documentary is a no-holds-barred look at a showbiz legend's life both on and off the stage

Grace Jones: Bloodlight and Bami

The first shot of a new ­documentary on Grace Jones sees the singer on stage, emerging from shadow into a spotlight, her features obscured by an imposing, gold-coloured mask. For anyone expecting great insight into Jones, I can’t say this is an auspicious start: here is the iconic performer in full on-stage battle-gear, donning a head dress that conceals far more than it reveals.

But over the course of director Sophie Fiennes’ bold and fascinating documentary Bloodlight and Bami the mask slips. Jones generously submits to Fiennes’ quietly probing camera, and the result is an up-close, surprisingly unguarded ­portrait of a compelling artist.

The singer is filmed performing some of her classics from her disco pomp (Slave to the Rhythm, Pull Up to the Bumper, etc) and new numbers to an adoring crowd. Jones, in a series of outlandish costume changes (hats courtesy of designer Philip Treacy) is a magnetic presence on stage, and Fiennes is smart enough to keep the camera at a respectful distance to capture the unfolding theatrical spectacle.

But alongside these admiring views, Fiennes features more intimate, observational footage of Jones away from the stage. Charting the veteran pop star at work on a new record (in fact the 2008 album Hurricane – which indicates the long period over which Fiennes shot the film), Bloodlight and Bami is a detailed study of Jones’ process. That seductive voice of hers makes her uniquely talented, but she works hard too, and there’s grit and determination here. At one point a ­musician misses a recording session, and by phone she subjects him to a barrage of charm and threats. It’s quite a display, and I bet he didn’t do it again.

Jones has a temper – she famously belted British chat show host Russell Harty in 1980 for turning his back on her – and there are a few volcanic eruptions here: a misunderstanding over a phone bill, for instance, prompts a furious call from Jones to her manager.

At one point a ­musician misses a recording session, and by phone she subjects him to a barrage of charm and threats. It’s quite a display

But mostly you’re caught up in the star’s barrelling, high-energy charisma, and her infectious delight in life’s passing pleasures: necking fresh oysters, for instance, during a break at a recording session or dancing exultantly in an after-hours club as a bouncer protects her from the paying punters on the dance floor, a moment that Fiennes’s blurry camerawork invests with dreamy lyricism.

We also follow Jones back to her childhood home in Jamaica, and among her extended family she is warm, open, relaxed, switching effortlessly between crisply spoken English and heavy patois. There are hints of some troubled history, in particular the many references to her grandmother’s late husband Mas P.

Can we ascribe Jones’ subsequent career as an attempt to escape the stifling influence of the disciplinarian; or trace her occasional outbursts to his dark moods? Maybe, the film suggests, but Fiennes mostly avoids excessive commentary or explanation, and that’s one of the strengths of her film.

Like Over Your Cities Grass Will Grow, her 2010 film about German artist Anselm Kiefer, Bloodlight and Bami illuminates the creative process while also respecting the essential mystery at the heart of any ­artistic endeavour.

Grace Jones: Bloodlight and Bami is in cinemas from October 27

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