BIRD ON A WIRE 
  
UK 1972 
 
  
Documentary of  Leonard Cohen's World Tour 
 
  
Music includes performances of:
 
Avalanche	 					
Suzanne	 					
Tonight Will Be Fine 				
Passing Through	 
Sisters of Mercy 					
Who By Fire? 					
Story of Isaac 					
One Of Us Can’t Be Wrong		 	
The Partisan		 
Sisters of Mercy		 			
Chelsea Hotel	 				
Nancy	 					
One Of Us Can’t Be Wrong	 		
Famous Blue Raincoat	 			
Hey, That’s No Way To Say Goodbye		 
So Long, Marianne	 			
Bird On A Wire 
 
The poems, from The Energy of Slaves, include: 
“Any system you contrive without us will be brought down”  
“I perceived the outline of your breasts”  
“The killers that run the other countries”  
“Since I am now broken down, no leader of the borning world…..”   
 
 
The world premiere of this feature film by Tony Palmer was at the Rainbow Theater on July 5, 1974, in London. The original version cost over 120.000 USD *) to produce, but Cohen was not satisfied. He spent six months in England editing and rearranging the film to show the deeper elements in music, the conditions that produced it, and his interaction with the audiences. It contains songs from albums as well as concerts, including those of Berlin, Vienna, Copenhagen, and Israel in March and April 1972. It is a documentary rather than an art film. Color, 90 min.
(Ira Nadel: Life in Art, p. 111; Dorman & Rawlins: Prophet of the Heart, p. 279)
  
*) According to information received in 2010 from Tony Palmer the production cost of the original film (his version) was around £30.000. 
 
  
Tony Palmer's classic version on DVD
  
 
  
In 1972 Leonard Cohen was considered to be one of the major singer song writers and poets of  our time. It was decided by Cohen's then manager, Marty Machat, to make a film about Leonard at work, on tour and 'Off Duty'. The film was entitled Bird on a Wire and featured some fantastic performance footage. It was directed by the celebrated British film director Tony Palmer and scheduled for release in late 1972.  After screening a rough copy, the BBC immediately bought the UK TV rights.  But after 9 months of re-editing at Cohen's request, a second version was released in the 1974.  
   It was thought that the original film had been lost until more than 290 rolls of film in rusted cans were discovered in late 2009.  The cans contained much of the original 'rushes' of the film, and especially most if not all of the original soundtracks. So, in 2010 with Leonard Cohen once again at the forefront of popular music, Tony Palmer has lovingly restored the film to much of its original glory.  The film runs at 107 minutes, as did his original in 1972,  and when it is released on DVD in September will include much that will make this the ultimate package for Leonard Cohen fans.
  
The DVD was finally released in September 2010. The world premiere was at the Leonard Cohen Event in Krakow, Poland, on August 6, 2010,
presented by Tony Palmer himself!
  
 
  
 
 
 
  
 
 
  
Still photos from the film provided by Martin Rupps/3sat
 
  
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