Nick Cave Movies
A post-punk, neo-gothic balladeer with an ardent following, Australian musician
Nick Cave has also lent his distinctive presence to films as both a composer and performer. Raised in small town Wangaratta, Australia,
Cave attended boarding school in Melbourne, where he met future collaborator
Mick Harvey and formed a band that became
the Birthday Party. After a couple of years in art school and a move to London,
Cave and
the Birthday Party left their incendiary mark on the second-generation punk scene before disbanding in 1983.
Cave then settled in West Berlin following a brief sojourn in Los Angeles, teaming with
Harvey and German musician
Blixa Bargeld to form Nick Cave & the Bad Seeds. As befitting a band named after a passage in the Bible,
Cave's songs evolved into intense narratives filled with love, violence, and Biblical portent accompanied by dramatically eclectic, blues-tinged sonic backdrops. Among the Bad Seeds' admirers was German director
Wim Wenders, who cast
Cave and the band in his Berlin seraphim allegory
Wings of Desire (1987). Appearing in the climactic scene,
Cave inwardly despaired about having to perform a fan favorite before launching into the thematically fitting "From Her to Eternity." The Bad Seeds also contributed an apocalyptic love song to
Wenders' millennial epic
Until the End of the World (1991).
Continuing his movie work after
Wings of Desire, a screenplay
Cave helped pen during his Los Angeles stint was turned into a film by fellow Aussie
John Hillcoat. A brutal prison drama based on actual events,
Ghosts...of the Civil Dead (1988) featured
Cave as one of the inmates, and was nominated for a slew of Australian Film Institute awards, including one for
Cave and one for
Harvey and
Bargeld's haunting score. After kicking an infamous drug habit and moving to Brazil in the late '80s,
Cave's creative output flourished into the 1990s, beginning with the sixth Bad Seeds album The Good Son and a German documentary chronicling the band,
The Road to God Knows Where, in 1990. Continuing to make acclaimed music with the Bad Seeds throughout the decade, including the creepy
Scream (1996) and
X-Files (1998) soundtrack tune "Red Right Hand,"
Cave also contributed to a number of offbeat film projects. Sending up his usual dark attire and goth mien,
Cave appeared as the platinum blond, white-clad rocker muse to
Brad Pitt's wannabe title character in
Tom DiCillo's wry indie
Johnny Suede (1991). An apt match of innovators,
Cave scored a documentary about American avant-garde cinema icon
Jonas Mekas,
Jonas in the Desert (1994); his skill with dark ballads elegantly meshed with the subject in the performance-documentary
September Songs: The Music of Kurt Weill (1995). Along with releasing the Bad Seeds' Murder Ballads in 1996,
Cave acted in and composed the score for
Rhinoceros Hunting in Budapest (1996), and reunited with
Hillcoat to score
Hillcoat's
To Have & to Hold (1997). Moving back to London in the late '90s,
Cave provided the music for the
Irvine Welsh-scripted triptych film
The Acid House (1998). ~ Lucia Bozzola, Rovi