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Nico-Icon

Play trailer Poster for Nico-Icon Released Sep 8, 1995 1h 10m Documentary Play Trailer Watchlist
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82% Tomatometer 17 Reviews 91% Popcornmeter 100+ Ratings
This documentary focuses on German model, singer and actress Nico, who is most renowned for her associations with artist Andy Warhol and revered 1960s rock act the Velvet Underground. Nico gained attention for her icy Teutonic looks and, later, her unusual voice, but was plagued by depression and drug addiction. The performer is presented in film clips and photos, and the film also features interviews with associates such as singer-songwriter Jackson Browne and musical collaborator John Cale.

Critics Reviews

View All (17) Critics Reviews
Dave Kehr New York Daily News As recorded in the great wealth of documentary footage Ofteringer has assembled, the cheekbones slowly collapse and the blue eyes become watery, their owner becoming more and more dependent on hard drugs and fast living. Aug 2, 2013 Full Review Bruce Diones New Yorker With extraordinary technique, Ofteringer paints a moody, melancholy picture of a legend who decayed into the ghost of herself. Aug 2, 2013 Full Review Owen Gleiberman Entertainment Weekly Rated: A- Sep 7, 2011 Full Review Cole Smithey ColeSmithey.com Rated: 4/5 Oct 20, 2007 Full Review Craig Phillips GreenCine Rated: 3/5 Aug 11, 2005 Full Review Emanuel Levy EmanuelLevy.Com Rated: 3/5 Aug 4, 2005 Full Review Read all reviews

Audience Reviews

View All (8) audience reviews
Audience Member I first became aware of the singer Nico in 1988, ironically the year the singer passed away. I was becoming a huge fan of Siouxsie and the Banshees and a new book had been published about the band. The first few pages went through the early lives of the band members and the bands they were listening to as they were growing up. Of course one of them was The Velvet Underground and Nico. The picture published to illustrate this however wasn't one of the iconic monochromatic shots of the band wearing shades, black clothing and looking absolutely cool with it. Instead, the image was of Nico but after see had dyed her hair and wasn't the glacially beautiful blonde chanteuse anymore. The pic was from 1970 and she was dressed in a cape. 'What Goth could have become if more people had taken Nico to their hearts', I thought. Shortly after this I started listening to and loving The Velvet Underground starting with their iconic first album. Nico's voice was a revelation. Her teutonic vocals with her own sense of phrasing and meter were mindblowingly original. In fact, after hearing this album I bought The Marble Index and my love for Nico and her career was born. On seeing the documentary Nico Icon on YouTube I decided to investigate further. And I'm so glad I did. The film fully explores Nico's legacy and metamorphosis brilliantly from her time as a model (a profession she hated as she saw herself as a blonde smiling object and nothing more), her introduction to movies with her turn in La Dolce Vita no less, her introduction to singing and then becoming a staple of Warhol's Factory crowd (Andy famously described her singing style as like that of an IBM computer with a Greta Garbo accent) after being introduced to Warhol by Bob Dylan. Her stint as chanteuse on The Velvet Underground's iconic first album (not to mention her relationship with The Velvet's lead singer Lou Reed) followed shortly after this with her solo career as a result. I wasn't prepared for the emotional pull that the documentary has. The scene in which Nico's aunt is listening to I'll Be Your Mirror and starts crying because of the beauty of the music and her late niece's vocals is incredibly moving. The fact that Lou Reed's lyrics are displayed on the screen via the film's subtitles show just how gorgeous they are. The melancholic and reflective aspect of Nico's music is also explored with songs as achingly stirring as You Are Beautiful and You Are Alone acting as a reflection of Nico's life. She was evidently her own mirror for the world to see. The transformation of Nico from blonde bombshell to Angel of Death is also examined. With this metamorphosis people who said to her that the change was too drastic and made her look ugly were met with joyous proclamations from the woman herself. She loved the fact that she wasn't a blonde object of beauty anymore for others to ogle, an object.  She seemed to hate life and to be looking forward to death. She infamously became a junkie with her addiction to heroine (what else for the guest singer with The Velvets) which meant she toured constantly to supplement her habit. James Young is on hand to tell tales of what it was like to be in her band during this period with one incident involving her deliberately handing him a tour's worth of used needles for him to dispose of when they were approaching border control whilst in their tour bus. 'She was the Queen of the Bad Girls', Young states. She also loved the track marks, rotting teeth and bad skin that the drug had bestowed on her body. 'That was her aesthetic', Young opines. Nico's son Ari from her relationship with French actor Alain Delon (one of Nico's other former lovers expresses that Delon was descended from sausage makers and even though he became a famous actor there was no getting away from his true family vocation in life) is also interviewed. We hear the shocking revelation that it was her who introduced him to heroine and that whilst he was once in a coma, she came to the hospital to record the noises his life support machine made to utilise on her next album. But throughout the documentary one thing truly shines through and that is the music itself. There has never been any other artist like Nico in terms of music and image. She was a true individual with a back catalogue that is alarmingly and consistently brilliant. Whilst her first album Chelsea Girl was material written by others for her, her second album and every subsequent album after this starting with The Marble Index, showed that Nico wasn't just an amazing singer and frontperson but also an astonishing writer. Her imagery and obsessions are just as idiosyncratic as her persona and are utterly intoxicating. Fortunately this is captured in the documentary with all phases of her music career being given an airing. And that's one of the greatest aspects of the film- it encourages the viewer to investigate further and fall full-on into the disturbing, beautiful and esoteric rabbit-hole that is Nico's oeuvre. And it's an amazing place to vacate. Her transition from the blonde Ice Queen to the Angel of Death is extraordinary enough and reminds me of the transition that Scott Walker made from pop star pin-up to serious artist who made the kind of music that music critics can't salivate over more. Nico was even more exemplary as when she started writing her own material we were suddenly plunged headlong into her own world with it's own meanings and rules. It was a sphere of frozen borderlines, friar hermits and janitors of lunacy. What does it all mean? Who knows. But it works beautifully. We were invited into the mindscape of an island, a question mark, a true maverick and, dare I say, a genius. This documentary is so good that not even the very pretentious device of snippets of dialogue appearing on the screen as text just as a subject is saying them can even ruin or tarnish proceedings. Thankfully this isn't employed too often but why it was used at all is beyond me. Proceedings are rounded off with a rendition of Frozen Warnings from the album The Marble Index sung by John Cale at the piano. It's an apt tribute to a singer who Cale saw as someone truly exceptional even if the world is still catching up on Nico's genius. But with a new biography coming out soon it appears that the wheels are in motion regarding this. This documentary is a great starting point for the uninitiated and familiar alike. Essential and one of the best documentaries about one of the best and beguiling subjects ever to grace the arts. Even Siskel and Ebert gave the film two thumbs up. But don't let that put you off. Rated 5 out of 5 stars 02/19/23 Full Review Audience Member Successful in creating a mood (of total nihilistic depression) through a portrait of the German fashion model turned Warhol Factory denizen and Velvet Underground singer turned goth junkie gypsy. And how could director Ofteringer not be successful with Nico's spooky droning chanteuse music as her soundtrack. Talking heads vie with 1960s and 1970s footage to tell her story, which makes you wonder whether she became hollowed out by the early objectification she experienced and/or whether it was the drugs that brought her down so low. You get the idea that to come into contact with her would be like feeling the icy fingers of your own death. I'll have to pull out her records now (and remember that art is something to live for). Rated 4 out of 5 stars 02/04/23 Full Review Audience Member Not always super compelling, yet I liked the fact that the film just laid out the sad facts of Nico's life and did sugar coat or embellish her as some sort of super elite artist. She was a troubled, creative woman whose demons got the better of her. A cautionary tale for all. Rated 3 out of 5 stars 02/18/23 Full Review Audience Member Awesome Movie Impossible to find but because I am a die hard velvet's fan I had to buy a used VHS copy and will look for a DVD in the future Rated 5 out of 5 stars 01/15/23 Full Review Audience Member Je ne connaissais le Velvet et Nico que de réputation, mes tentatives de découverte de la musique ayant toujours été un peu contrariées par le fait que je n'ai toujours pas trouvé la porte d'entrée. Nico est une énigme, c'est difficile de résumer le personnage puisque personne ne l'a vraiment connue. Elle vivait seule dans sa bulle, au milieu du reste du monde (enfin au milieu du reste du monde intello-artistique), fascinant systématiquement son entourage, s'amourachant soit d'illuminés plus ou moins talentueux, ne faisant jamais ce qu'on attend d'elle (et pas par pure opposition rebelle). Elle avait une voie (et une voix) à elle, elle l'a suivi sans se poser de question, la poussant à tomber enceinte de Delon (qui refusera de reconnaitre l'enfant, reniera plus ou moins sa mère qui l'élève), abandonné son fils avant de le retrouver et de l'initier à l'héroïne. Muse de Warhol, parachutée chanteuse d'un groupe qui joue ensemble depuis 4 jours (le Velvet), top model, squatteuse, chanteuse, compositrice (inséparable de son harmonium), elle a vécu 10 vies sans qu'aucune ne lui ait jamais apporté vraiment le bonheur (peut être portait-elle le deuil de son père tué par les SS). Ce qui est troublant, c'est d'abord son physique. D'une froideur que j'ai rarement pu voir, belle à se damner sur certains plans (elle portait cette beauté comme un fardeau, fardeau dont elle s'est débarrassé à coups de teinture et de drogues), hideuse à d'autre, elle portait en elle une détresse, un mal être palpables. Elle ne s'intéressait à rien jusqu'à ce qu'elle se lance dans sa "carrière" solo, elle fascinait tout le monde parce qu'elle était inatteignable, que personne ne pouvait la connaitre. Je ne suis malheureusement pas très sensible à sa musique mais force est de reconnaitre qu'elle véhicule bien ses émotions, la souffrance, la tristesse, la mélancolie dans le meilleur des cas. Fascinée par Jim Morrison (au point qu'elle s'endort après avoir allumé un cierge devant sa photo), elle ne voit que lui sur terre qui ait quelque chose en commun avec elle. Très difficile de parler de Nico. Elle a fasciné autant que Marylin (avec qui elle a pris des cours de comédie d'ailleurs) mais à un niveau plus intello, chez ceux qui voulaient être hype... Voir ses (nombreux) anciens amants se replonger dans leurs souvenirs, les voir souffrir des années plus tard de sa disparition (ou juste de leur rupture) ou encore entendre Ari, son fils (qu'elle a pourtant abandonné et initié à la drogue) en parler comme d'une divinité (y a un Œdipe mal soigné d'ailleurs) c'est assez irréel, on a du mal à imaginer une femme comme ça. Presque plus humaine, elle vivait sur un autre plan de réalité (elle l'explique d'ailleurs, elle avait son petit monde dans sa tête dans lequel elle se réfugiait). Je crois que si un scénariste avait écrit un personnage comme celui de Nico, personne n'aurait cru à l'histoire. Assez troublant. En tout cas, documentaire super intéressant, beaucoup d'archives et de témoignages, des extraits des soirées chez Warhol (ouh putain), des films de Garrel (ouh putain bis), beaucoup de longs plans silencieux et serrés sur ses yeux (quelle tristesse). Troublant encore une fois. Rated 3.5 out of 5 stars 02/26/23 Full Review Audience Member One of my favorite films. Nico!!!!! Rated 5 out of 5 stars 02/12/23 Full Review Read all reviews
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Movie Info

Synopsis This documentary focuses on German model, singer and actress Nico, who is most renowned for her associations with artist Andy Warhol and revered 1960s rock act the Velvet Underground. Nico gained attention for her icy Teutonic looks and, later, her unusual voice, but was plagued by depression and drug addiction. The performer is presented in film clips and photos, and the film also features interviews with associates such as singer-songwriter Jackson Browne and musical collaborator John Cale.
Director
Susanne Ofteringer
Producer
Thomas Mertens, Peter Nadermann, Annette Pisacane
Screenwriter
Susanne Ofteringer
Distributor
Roxie Releasing
Genre
Documentary
Original Language
English
Release Date (Theaters)
Sep 8, 1995, Original
Runtime
1h 10m
Sound Mix
Surround