The film has often been described as a tapestry, and that's about right. The city of Nashville is used as a nexus or hub; even the people who live there seem like they might be tourists. (The exception is Keenan Wynn, playing a geezer with a small boardinghouse and a wife in the hospital. "What are you doing in Nashville?" a guy asks Wynn genially at a coffee shop. "I live here," says Wynn. "Oh," says the guy. It's a real conversation killer.)

A dozen or so characters are moving through town. A dozen or so others are based in town. Keith Carradine is the sexily self-absorbed star of a hit folk-rock trio; Lily Tomlin is a suburban wife and gospel singer -- she has something of the angelic and something of the shellshocked about her -- with two deaf children. Henry Gibson plays the oily Haven Hamilton, a specialist in sanctimonious spoken-sung inspirational weepers, and the city's unofficial greeter.

Geraldine Chaplin is the hopelessly pretentious flibbertigibbet "Opal, of the BBC." "Un, deux, trois, quatre. Testing, testing," she murmurs into her mike as she warms up her tape recorder. She's there as a stand-in for Altman, and for anyone who would breeze into town to make overblown metaphorical points. The central figures -- although they get no more screen time than many other characters -- are Michael Murphy, as the candidate's smooth advance man, and Ronee Blakley, playing an emotionally fragile star who's returning to town after being away, recovering from burns she got from a "fire baton." ("Nashville" probably took its self-mocking tone, as well as its subject matter, from William Price Fox's Nashville novel "Ruby Red" and his script "The Great Southern Amusement Company," both of which Altman had read.)

The film is like a series of overlapping variety shows set in parking lots, airport lobbies, hotel rooms, commercial strips and hospitals, and seen through plate glass and past billboards. It's a jerry-built world of the disposable and the efficient. Altman gets the look of small-city mid-America: the knee-high socks, the businessmen in their tan suits -- a Chamber of Commerce, high-school-athletic-team look.

People who wanted a tribute to the city of Nashville, or to country music, took the film very hard, as though the music and the city needed defending. "Cheap shot," "patronizing," "rip-off" -- these were some of the accusations thrown at the film. I was willing to believe Altman had been a little rough on his subject until I visited Nashville for the first time, years after seeing the film. I was thunderstruck by how little the film had exaggerated; it had been more of a documentary and less of a satire than I'd thought. There was no escaping the bad middle-range singers, the bored backup musicians, the terrifying big hair, the Goo-Goo candy bars, the homey sentiments, the cranky retirees in cheery T-shirts.

The film comes across as a piece of New Journalism; it's like Norman Mailer's reports from conventions and rallies. Altman is using Nashville metaphorically -- he's really talking about politics. I wish he didn't make that quite so explicit. There's a reference to Dallas and a few to the Kennedys, as well as some red-white-and-blue visual cues, that the film could have done without. Still, the result is an X-ray of the era's uneasy political soul.

What it reveals is a country trying to pull itself together from a nervous breakdown. As a young man, Altman had been taken by the Method, and in many of his films he has shown a love of watching women go to pieces. Here we watch not a blond in a slip but the entire country going through a crackup. It's a country that's wired up tight with tension masquerading as happiness. In this film about country music, the marketplace has leveled the ground, and there's only one shot of the countryside. It's of a funeral -- the arc of a life returning to its sources.

Recording and communication devices -- wires, phones, intercoms, cameras, mikes, speakers -- seem to be everywhere; so does the machinery of publicity and fame. We watch the city recording itself, playing itself back to itself and marketing that image to itself. We eavesdrop on the culture's conversation with itself. We're watching people decide how they want to see themselves and how they want to sell themselves. Altman treats Nashville as a provincial New York or Hollywood, as one of the places where the culture manufactures its image of itself (this is Nashville in the early stages of getting slick and L.A.-ified). Altman shows us the image, and what goes into creating and sustaining it. He cuts between public functions and private domestic scenes; he shoots in studios and theaters, from onstage and from behind control booths. We gather that this is a culture that believes that its self-image accounts, or ought to account, for everything. And its image of itself is cheerful, upbeat, carefree: "It don't worry me," people sing.

Altman brings us into the space between the culture and its image of itself. We see the determination that goes into containing oneself in the pop image of just-folks. We see the jumpy creature within, and we see how Nashville's self-image becomes a straitjacket. The songs that the characters sing, sell and buy are about roots and homesickness, and make a great show of being about "real" people and "real" problems. But they're completely formulaic. The real energy goes into the marketing. There's a consensus reality that has been created of simple shapes, bright colors and sweetened sentiments. A lot of the humor in "Nashville" comes from seeing how much heightening and industry go into producing this music that has such claims to relaxed authenticity.

The film is also a picture of a populist culture driving itself mad with celebrity. People want in to stardom, as they want in to heaven. And if they can't get at least a piece of stardom, they're furious. Altman shows us how we use stars. They give us focus. We tell ourselves their stories, and we organize our mental pictures around them. We want them to be real yet conform to our desires. But as populists, we're picky about whether our stars are putting on airs (as though that were the greatest sin). We're even picky about whether they're just too dang professional. They have to be one of us, yet special, because we want to feel we're a little special too.

The stages and studios of "Nashville" are full of professionals, but the stars themselves are near-amateurs, or very skilled at playing near-amateurs. Someone who really connects (like the Ronee Blakley character) can be a lightning rod for our frustrations. If there's a revelation "Nashville" drives toward, it has to do with how attached we are to our fictions and how inescapable we have made them. "How do you get outside?" we overhear a frazzled soul ask at a hospital nurses station. Comes the polite answer: "You dial 9." We feel starved for contact with the spiritual and the mythic, yet we live in a popularity-game world full of gods and superstitions. Altman uses the kids playing Lily Tomlin's deaf children symbolically. In this film with the most complicated of all movie soundtracks, they're the only characters untouched by the clamor and hubbub.

Recent Stories

Big Think: "I hope that we can restore our image"
Lawyer and author Mahvish Khan discusses her experiences at Guantánamo.
Critics' Picks
What you need to see, read, do this week: Indie rock for Barack, a time capsule of late-'80s bohemia, a peek at other people's diaries.
Don't call it mumblecore
Ultra-indie American film grows up in a hurry with Joe Swanberg and Greta Gerwig's erotic, wrenching relationship drama "Nights and Weekends."
"Happy-Go-Lucky"
Sally Hawkins gives the finest performance of the year in Mike Leigh's intimate masterpiece.
"Greatest film ever" or a cream cake?
Mocked on initial release and long unavailable, Max Ophüls' wide-screen spectacle "Lola Montès" returns in a lustrous restoration. So what's the big deal?

Daily Newsletter

Get Salon in your mailbox!