Tim Buckleyโs prodigious musical gifts bloomed in inverse proportion to his paternal instincts. The legendary folk-jazz singer wrote some of the most beautiful songs ever and sang like a demonic angel. Butโunfortunately for his son Jeff, also an inordinately talented vocalist/composerโTim couldnโt father worth a damn (he reputedly saw his child only twice). โMy wife hates my musicโ seems to be his rationale to cheat.
Greetings from Tim Buckley revolves around the conflict the ignored offspring feels about performing at a tribute concert in Brooklynโs St. Annโs Church for his absentee pa, who died at 28 of an accidental drug overdose. (Jeff died at 30 while swimming fully clothed in Memphisโs Wolf River.) Light on dramatic tension, the film toggles between Jeffโs preparation for the 1991 eventโand the attendant mixed feelings toward his fatherโs legacyโand Timโs musical and sexual conquests circa 1966, the year Jeff was born.
The extraordinarily cheekboned Penn Badgley portrays Jeff as a tormented artiste who broods cutely. He adequately approximates Buckleyโs soaring, ululating vocal style, and at the climactic concert, he aces two Tim songsโโI Never Asked to Be Your Mountainโ and โPhantasmagoria in Twoโโwith the makeshift band, including Jeffโs real-life musical partner, Gary Lucas. The show concludes with Jeff owning the tenderly gorgeous ballad โOnce I Wasโ solo. Thus, Jeff Buckleyโs career was launched.
The budding-romance side plot between Jeff and tribute-concert factotum Allie (Imogen Poots) adds little to the real meat of Greetings: the immortal compellingness of Tim Buckleyโs songsโeven in the filmโs rearranged versions of them. (For a more thorough homage to Timโs music, see the 2007 doc My Fleeting House.) ![]()
