Documents the pain and joy plants experience and how they communicate it. Soundtrack by Stevie Wonder.Documents the pain and joy plants experience and how they communicate it. Soundtrack by Stevie Wonder.Documents the pain and joy plants experience and how they communicate it. Soundtrack by Stevie Wonder.
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- 1 nomination
Ruby Crystal
- Self
- (voice)
John Ashley Hamilton
- Self
- (as John Ashley Hamilton)
Peter Tompkins
- Self
- (voice)
Elizabeth Vreeland
- Self
- (voice)
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- Writers
- All cast & crew
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A curious moment in Stevie Wonder's life
I saw this film when it was briefly released in 1980, in Berkeley, California; and I've watched this film many times since (having downloaded a copy from bittorrent). Seeing the film will help people understand Stevie Wonder's misbegotten album, _Journey Through the Secret Life of Plants_, which was released in 1979 before the film had even appeared. Somehow, with the help of the film's producer, Michael Braun, Stevie Wonder composed a score for a movie he could never have seen.
The film does have its glorious moments: lengthy sequences in time-lapse photography show plants growing, unfolding, and transforming. For these, Stevie Wonder provided closely-linked music (from "Earth's Creation," "The First Garden," and "Seasons"). Other Stevie Wonder songs are tied in with the movie. The first song on the album, "Same Old Story," is virtually impossible to comprehend unless you have been introduced to the work of Jagadis Chandra Bose, a 19th-century Indian physicist who devised delicate equipment to monitor electric impulses from plant tissue. Stevie somehow condenses Bose's work, and that of George Washington Carver, into a few rhyming quatrains, producing poetry more humorously garbled than anything else he's written. "Venus Flytrap," not surprisingly, follows the adventure of a fly dumb enough to be caught by an insect-eating plant. "Outside my Window" accompanies organic gardening, while _Black Orchid_ is given an interpretive dance by Eartha Robinson, clad in a full-body green suit. 'Race Babbling"--heard in only a few short sequences--contemplates one of the consequences of time-lapse photography: if plants unfold in unspeakable slowness, what must the restless activity of humans look like to plants? Anyone who has seen the later _Koyaanisqatsi_ (1983) will recognize the disturbing effect of speeded-up human life, underscored by Stevie Wonder's dissonant music.
All these sequences are linked together by the music to Stevie Wonder's title piece, "Secret Life of Plants," which appears in various disguises until finally revealed at the end of the film in Wonder's only appearance. He wanders across bleak, rocky landscapes and fields of flowers without his sunglasses (the same sequence that produced the photo in the album), and even rows a boat!
Other than these sequences, the film itself is dull: ineptly edited, tedious in its explanation of scientific experiments (including some absurd ones conducted by Soviet scientists), and narrated in a dull monotone that will remind one of high-school filmstrips. it's easy to understand why Paramount Pictures decided to drop the film. (The director, Walon Green, went on to fame as the screenwriter and producer of _Law and Order_ on TV.) It's just too bad today that the film is unreleased on DVD, since it is the only way to fully understand an inspired, if overly ambitious, project by Stevie Wonder.
The film does have its glorious moments: lengthy sequences in time-lapse photography show plants growing, unfolding, and transforming. For these, Stevie Wonder provided closely-linked music (from "Earth's Creation," "The First Garden," and "Seasons"). Other Stevie Wonder songs are tied in with the movie. The first song on the album, "Same Old Story," is virtually impossible to comprehend unless you have been introduced to the work of Jagadis Chandra Bose, a 19th-century Indian physicist who devised delicate equipment to monitor electric impulses from plant tissue. Stevie somehow condenses Bose's work, and that of George Washington Carver, into a few rhyming quatrains, producing poetry more humorously garbled than anything else he's written. "Venus Flytrap," not surprisingly, follows the adventure of a fly dumb enough to be caught by an insect-eating plant. "Outside my Window" accompanies organic gardening, while _Black Orchid_ is given an interpretive dance by Eartha Robinson, clad in a full-body green suit. 'Race Babbling"--heard in only a few short sequences--contemplates one of the consequences of time-lapse photography: if plants unfold in unspeakable slowness, what must the restless activity of humans look like to plants? Anyone who has seen the later _Koyaanisqatsi_ (1983) will recognize the disturbing effect of speeded-up human life, underscored by Stevie Wonder's dissonant music.
All these sequences are linked together by the music to Stevie Wonder's title piece, "Secret Life of Plants," which appears in various disguises until finally revealed at the end of the film in Wonder's only appearance. He wanders across bleak, rocky landscapes and fields of flowers without his sunglasses (the same sequence that produced the photo in the album), and even rows a boat!
Other than these sequences, the film itself is dull: ineptly edited, tedious in its explanation of scientific experiments (including some absurd ones conducted by Soviet scientists), and narrated in a dull monotone that will remind one of high-school filmstrips. it's easy to understand why Paramount Pictures decided to drop the film. (The director, Walon Green, went on to fame as the screenwriter and producer of _Law and Order_ on TV.) It's just too bad today that the film is unreleased on DVD, since it is the only way to fully understand an inspired, if overly ambitious, project by Stevie Wonder.
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- jazz prof
- Mar 1, 2013
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Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Languages
- Also known as
- La vida secreta de las plantas
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime1 hour 37 minutes
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.85 : 1
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By what name was The Secret Life of Plants (1978) officially released in Canada in English?
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