Jeremy Allen White in 'Springsteen: Deliver Me from Nowhere.' Macall Polay/20th Century Studios Share on Facebook Share on X Share to Flipboard Send an Email Show additional share options Share on LinkedIn Share on Pinterest Share on Reddit Share on Tumblr Share on Whats App Print the Article Post a Comment Just as A Complete Unknown escaped the dreary conventionality of cradle-to-grave music biopics by surveying the nascent period in the stardom of its unknowable subject, Bob Dylan, Springsteen: Deliver Me From Nowhere makes affecting gains by focusing on the Artist as a Depressed Young Man. Which is not to say Scott Cooper's Bruce Springsteen portrait is a downer. If you're looking to celebrate the anthemic hits of blue-collar New Jersey's favorite son, this highly personal movie might not meet your requirements. But serious fans - particularly those who admire the lo-fi 1982 album Nebraska - should connect with the intimate drama. Related Stories Movies Telluride: Jafar Panahi on Hand, George Clooney Not, as Fest Kicks Off with Patrons Brunch and 'La Grazia' Preview Movies 'Highway 99: A Double Album' Review: Ethan Hawke Pays Tribute to Merle Haggard With a Rousing and Soulful Pilgrimage Through His Songs Released between the seminal 1980 double album The River and the definitive leap to superstardom four years later with Born in the U.S.A., Nebraska was a bold career move and not the fresh crop of Top 10 singles for which Columbia Records likely was hoping. A thematically dark acoustic collection built from a DIY recording, it was inspired by Flannery O'Connor stories, Terrence Malick's Badlands, late '50s spree killer Charles Starkweather and Springsteen's unaddressed childhood trauma. Springsteen: Deliver Me From Nowhere The Bottom Line A nuanced portrait suffused with heart and hurt. Venue: Telluride Film FestivalRelease date: Friday, October 24Cast: Jeremy Allen White, Jeremy Strong, Paul Walter Hauser, Stephen Graham, Odessa Young, Gaby Hoffman, Marc Maron, David KrumholtzDirector-screenwriter: Scott Cooper, based on Warren Zanes' book 2 hours All this presents Jeremy Allen White with something of a challenge in the title role, and though his resemblance to Springsteen is minimal, he digs deep into the musician's brooding interiority during a low period that ultimately resulted in him seeking overdue treatment for depression. He plays the rugged character, dressed in his uniform of plaid flannel shirt, jeans and leather jacket, as a man physically burdened by his demons. Early on, Cooper slips in an exhilarating performance interlude with Bruce and the E Street Band tearing up the Cincinnati Coliseum stage in 1981 with "Born to Run." (White's vocals are mixed with Springsteen's in the live performances.) But this is an altogether more introspective movie than that scene suggests. Coming down from the massive 12-month River Tour, Bruce is 32 and lost. He tells his longtime friend and manager Jon Landau (Jeremy Strong): "I just need to get home and slow things down a little." Jon secures him a rental in a quiet, woodsy part of Colts Neck, N.J., where he tries to figure out what to do with himself. Occasionally, he revisits his bar-band days at the Stone Pony in Asbury Park, but while Columbia is pushing Jon to steer him onto the next "Hungry Heart," Bruce is more preoccupied with feeling estranged from the world he knows best. Even a tentative spark of romance with single-parent diner server Faye (Odessa Young), the younger sister of a schoolmate he struggles to remember, becomes difficult for him to sustain in some of the most poignant scenes. The rabbit hole of memory opens up when Bruce drives by his childhood home, now a sad, dilapidated residence in a working-class neighborhood, his parents having relocated to California. But the fear he often felt around his volatile father Doug (Stephen Graham), a drunk with violent mood swings, and the anxiety of his protective mother Adele (Gaby Hoffman) are still very much with him. Cooper switches to black-and-white for flashbacks, a well-worn memory device that works here thanks to longtime DP collaborator Masanobu Tayayanagi's textured visuals and a persuasive sense of the milieu. Young actor Matthew Anthony Pellicano Jr.'s vulnerability as preteen Bruce also makes those episodes come alive - a scene in which his dad takes him to see The Night of the Hunter is especially memorable. And Graham (superb in Adolescence) subtly introduces redeeming nuances that will deepen in some genuinely moving father-and-son scenes toward the end. To some extent, this is a making-of-an-album movie, a significant part of it spent on Bruce's time writing and recording songs on a four-track tape recorder in his bedroom at the Colts Neck house. Working only with guitar tech Mike Batlan (a straggly-haired Paul Michael Hauser), he lays down bare-bones versions of songs originally intended to be fleshed out in the studio with the E Street crew. But in frustrating sessions at sto
The Hollywood Reporter
Moderate 'Springsteen: Deliver Me From Nowhere' Review: Jeremy Allen White Gives Raw, Internalized Performance as The Boss in Contemplative Bio-Drama
August 30, 2025
3 months ago
11 celebrities mentioned
Original Source:
Read on The Hollywood Reporter
Health Analysis Summary
Our AI analysis has identified this article as health-related content with a severity level of 5/10.
This analysis is based on keywords, context, and content patterns related to medical news, health updates, and wellness information.
Celebrities Mentioned
Share this article: