FILM
COMMITTEE (+BONUS CD) (ECLECTIC VINYL)
The Committee is a 1968 British independent Black-and-white film starring Arthur Brown of the band The Crazy World of Arthur Brown.
It featured original music by Pink Floyd as well as Arthur Brown's song "Fire". This controversial document of Britain in the 60s is a filmed record of an talented group of improvisatory performers.
It's a razor sharp satire on everything from draft evasion and black militancy to middle-class pot-heads and blind-dating.
Starring Paul Jones of Manfred Mann fame, The Committee uses a surreal murder to explore the tension and conflict between bureaucracy on one side, and individual freedom on the other.
The film offers all the spontaneity and electricity of the live performance in the creative talents of The Committee, including a musical performance by The Crazy World of Arthur Brown.
Furthermore, it features a spooky incidental sound-track music (never issued on record) by the just-post Syd Barrett Pink Floyd!The movie follows a man (Paul Jones) who is unnamed (the credits list him as 'central character').
The movie starts out with the central character in a car with a man (Tom Kempinski) who just picked him up (listed as 'the victim' in the credits).
The victim talks to him, but he's uninterested. The victim decides to pull over because he doesn't like the sound of the engine.
While he's looking under the hood of the car the central character slams the hood down on him, decapitating him in the process.
The central character eventually sews the head back on, and the victim wakes up. The central character tells him he doesn't want to drive anymore that day and to leave without him.
A few years later the central character is called on to be part of a committee, groups that supposedly keep the system running but really don't do much of anything.
He feels paranoid that the committee was called on account of him, and runs into the victim while there, who doesn't seem to remember him.
The central character talks about this with a man listed as 'The committee director' (Robert Lloyd) in the credits.
This conversation lasts for the duration of the movie, and features most of the music Pink Floyd wrote for the film.