Labyrinth
Jim Henson / US, 1986
And suddenly there was the shocking news that David Bowie had died, three days after his 69th birthday. EYE commemorates the Thin White Duke with a screening of Labyrinth, a rarely screened fantasy tale starring Bowie in the lead as king of the goblins. Bowie also wrote the music and texts of the songs he performs in this film.
Director Jim Henson chose David Bowie for the role of Jareth the Goblin King in his fantasy family film. As king of the goblins, Bowie lives in a castle in a labyrinth reminiscent of the works of Escher. There he awaits the arrival of Sarah, the fifteen-year old girl that would rather not babysit her little brother. When she cries out she wishes the goblins would come and take him, she gets what she wants. There is nothing left for her to do but to fetch him back from Jareth”s magical subterranean realm.
Bowie gave a convincing performance as the sensual goblin king who manages to entice an adolescent girl on the brink of adulthood. Yet the film – based on a script by former Monty Python member Terry Jones – did not turn out to be the box office hit the producers hoped it would be. After Labyrinth, the legendary singer never again played a leading role in a feature film.
Bowie”s memorable performances as a being from outer space (Nicolas Roeg”s The Man Who Fell to Earth, 1976), as a ladies” man preying on rich and lonely widows in Weimar Berlin (David Hemmings Just a Gigolo, 1978) and – above all – as the upright British prisoner of war Major Jack “Strafer” Celliers who brings out the suppressed homo-eroticism of a cruel Japanese camp commander (Nagisa Ôshima”s Merry Christmas Mr. Lawrence, 1982) will forever be etched in the minds of all Bowie fans.
Details
Director
Jim Henson
Production year
1986
Country
US
Original title
Labyrinth
Subtitles
NLD
Format
35mm
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