Mayor of the Sunset Strip Review

by Laura Clifford (laura AT reelingreviews DOT com)
May 3rd, 2004

MAYOR OF THE SUNSET STRIP
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'Dear Rodney, Always be good to Rock and Roll and it will always be good to you.' Phil Spector

Monkee Davy Jones's film double., Sonny and Cher's pseudo-son. Buddy of David Bowie. Former disco owner and KROQ DJ Rodney Bingenheimer is responsible for countless careers while his own has devolved into a midnight to 3 a.m. slot on Sunday. Yet those in the know still recognize Rodney as "Mayor of the Sunset Strip."

Writer/director George Hickenlooper's ("Hearts of Darkness: A Filmmaker's Apocalypse," "The Man from Elysian Fields") highly entertaining documentary succeeds on three levels. It is the portrait of a man who mingles with stars but lives in a hovel, a chronicle of four decades of cutting edge music and a revelatory look at our celebrity-obsessed culture.

Bingenheimer was born of a father who moved to L.A. to become a movie star, but contented himself taking home movies of celebrity golf tournaments, and a mother who was an autograph hound. Rodney's mom, now deceased, kept a shrine to her son's brushes with fame. An early photo reveals the young boy against a bedroom wall plastered with TV Guide covers. When Rodney was just sixteen, his mother left him on the doorstep of his idol, Connie Stevens, and drove away, not reappearing for several years. Forced to make his own way, (Connie wasn't home), Rodney gravitated towards the Sunset Strip and soon the soft-spoken, 5'3" Rodney was a mover and shaker in the music biz.

Today Rodney still hangs with the stars, who all express genuine affection for the man. David Bowie, who was introduced to LA by Rodney, still makes time for his old friend and Courtney Love relates how Rodney was part of her fame agenda. Deborah Harry digs out her old Bingenheimer tee shirt for her interview and rock groupie extraordinaire Pamela des Barres relates that Rodney was the first man in Hollywood she made out with! (Her husband, rocker Michael des Barres, says that in the day Rodney had the allure of a drug dealer, but his drugs were young, nubile women and Robert Plant claims Rodney got more chicks than he did.) Mick Jagger calls him a groupie. In one brilliant montage, classic rocks scenes with the likes of the Beatles, Beach Boys, the Doors, John and Yoko, Hendrix and Elvis, all having arrows pointing to the young Rodney, in the thick of it all.
So why, after knowing and helping the creme de la creme of rock for decades, isn't Rodney rich and famous himself? Maybe he's just been too nice of a guy and too much of a fan. Tellingly, Rodney mentions the Payola scandal and says he shouldn't have profited just for playing songs on the radio. (Just as an example, Rodney put Oasis on the airwaves via a cassette tape before they were signed by a label.) Hickenlooper asks his subject if he wishes his life had turned out differently and Rodney admits that things could have been a little different. 'I have very few close friends' he admits before Hickenlooper showcases a middle-aged musical wannabe who's kept off the streets by Rodney's generosity. The only time we witness Rodney getting angry is when his protege and co-broadcaster Chris Carter gets his own, better-slotted radio show.

Hickenlooper does a beautiful balancing act of portraying Rodney both in the midst of fame and existing on its edges by those he associates with. A very hyper Lance Loud is a friend and interviewee. A hilarious moment finds Rodney's dad and stepmom perplexed by a signed photo of Kato Kaelin in their collection. 'He just sent it to us' says dad. A fondly amused celeb recounts how the VIP section in Rodney's English Disco club was just a velvet rope around a table 'two feet away from everybody else' because 'that's just how Rodney was.'

"Mayor of the Sunset Strip" is an engrossing piece of work that begins on a high note of humor and the exhilaration of the times and winds down with a melancholy, quiet air. Hickenlooper's portrait of Bingenheimer takes a rock footnote and finally gives him center stage.

A-

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