DVD Review

Walk the Line (2006)

EW's GRADE
B+

Details Release Date: Nov 18, 2005; Rated: PG-13; DVD Release Date: Feb 28, 2006; Genres: Biopic, Drama; With: Joaquin Phoenix and Reese Witherspoon; Distributor: Fox 2000 Pictures; More

 GO, JOHNNY, GO Come for the music, stay for the love story
Image credit: Walk the Line: Suzanne Tenner
GO, JOHNNY, GO Come for the music, stay for the love story

All About

Walk the Line

Get the latest photos, news, and more

When Walk the Line opened, the press wrote reams on how bold it was for Joaquin Phoenix to be providing his own vocals for this story of Johnny Cash. What seemed like a good publicity angle can now be viewed as a liability for the film's real purpose: to depict the love story between Cash and Reese Witherspoon's June Carter. Walk the Line didn't become the award-nominated juggernaut its early supporters predicted, and I think there's another reason for that: It's about the world of country music and contains an awful lot of songs. If you're not into country, seeing Walk the Line in a theater must have been something of a trial.

The DVD is another story. I'm going to suggest something heretical: If you're in it for the romance, any time you hit a song that doesn't turn you on, just fast-forward through it. Except for a few occasions — as when Johnny and June duet on ''Jackson'' and ''It Ain't Me, Babe,'' which dramatize their deepening connection — the music often gets in the way. The terrific stuff isn't Phoenix's wobbly approximation of Cash's rumbling baritone, but the way the actor plays his tentative yet passionate courtship. Best of all is Witherspoon, who glows with fierce energy and rascally humor.

Director James Mangold's commentary track doesn't do much but heap praise on his actors. (You will learn, though, that if you're friends with Phoenix, you call him ''Joaq'' — pronounced ''Wock.'') There are also 10 deleted scenes, and Mangold frequently notes that they wouldn't have furthered the action — boy, is he right. So just focus on enjoying Cash pitching woo to Carter, and you've got yourself a nice evening of emotionally fraught lovey-dove.

Originally posted Feb 24, 2006 Published in issue #866 Mar 03, 2006 Order article reprints

Add your comment

The rules: Keep it clean, and stay on the subject or we might delete your comment. If you see inappropriate language, e-mail us. An asterisk * indicates a required field.

500 characters remaining
Advertisement