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Sundance 2012: In ‘Shut Up,’ the enigma of LCD Soundsystem

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Rock stars tend to exit the public stage in one of two ways: with a burst of drama or by fading away on sad-sack tours. But James Murphy, the elusive frontman of the indie-rock band LCD Soundsystem, is trying a third way: retiring on top.

In February 2011, with the band’s internal dynamics smooth and commercial fortune smiling upon them, Murphy, for seemingly no good reason, announced that he was breaking up the band. He made one last media appearance (on “The Colbert Report”), played a final show at Madison Square Garden and called it a day.

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Murphy’s Barry Sanders-like move is explored — enigmatically, of course — in “Shut Up and Play the Hits,” a documentary premiering Sunday at the Sundance Film Festival about the former DJ and his final days as head of the soul/punk/disco-tinged rock band he created in 2002. Murphy is in nearly every frame of the movie, and yet his essence remains tantalizingly out of sight. He’s remarkably ordinary, and yet with his economy of words and unusual choices, a sense of mystery always seems to hover over him.

Photos: The scene at Sundance 2012

“If you succeed, people assume you’re not like them. I did the same thing with rock stars,’ Murphy said Friday by phone from New York, where he was preparing to fly to Sundance early Saturday. “But I’d be totally lunatic to think it’s something essential about myself that has any kind of mystique.’

His fans seem to feel otherwise. Over the course of three LCD studio albums and numerous smaller and underground releases, the group’s music became a kind of gospel for a generation of cool-chasing kids, as Murphy won over legions with his quaint, throwback, non-corporate sensibility (and, it should be said, alienated others with his preciousness).

Cross-cutting between the now-famous Garden show (it lasted nearly four hours and featured a host of indie-rock luminaries, such as Arcade Fire) and the morning after as Murphy prosaically walks his dog and cleans out a storage room, “Hits” is both about LCD Soundsystem and something larger.

The directors, the British documentarians Dylan Southern and Will Lovelace (who directed the Blur documentary “No Distance Left to Run’) pitch their film somewhere between concert movie and intimate portrait. They’re certainly not afraid to stay with the music: Unlike many concert documentaries, they use a cinematographer to shoot the band on-stage and allow entire LCD songs such as “Losing My Edge” and “All My Friends” to play uncut. Murphy even helped mix the movie’s sound.

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But the filmmakers also slyly use Murphy to engage the audience in questions about the nature of fame: what we want from rock stars, and how they feel about giving it to us. Reserved, chubby and sporting gray stubble for much of the film, the 41-year-old musician is in many ways the anti-rock star. And that somehow makes him even more compelling.

“When you meet James there’s an aspect of personality, a contrarian-ness in how he approaches stuff, that’s hard to resist,’ Southern said. (There’s also what Southern and manager Keith Wood each said in interviews was an exacting side of his personality — ‘a meticulousness that’s so exacting it borders on OCD,’ Southern said.)

We get a glimpse of that contrarian-ness via an interview Murphy did with music journalist Chuck Klosterman, portions of which the filmmakers sprinkle throughout the film. But the directors tell their story without using any talking heads, following a tactic tried by last year’s breakout Sundance doc, “Senna,” and in fact include very little background on the band in general, focusing instead on just its final few days. (The other members of the band barely register in the movie, but Murphy said there’s no animosity among them over the breakup.)

‘We never had any intention of making a biography; we didn’t want it to be the film of the band met here and then this happened. We wanted to capture what was happening during a moment in time,” Southern said.

The essential question of that moment — why did Murphy do it? — is both hinted at and kept at a remove.

The musician is alternately shown saying he was concerned for his health if he kept going with the band and its heavy touring demands, didn’t want the responsibilities of fame (musically or otherwise) that he thought awaited; and that he hoped to slow down and have a family.

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He also lets slip that he has moments when he doubts his decision and thinks it in fact could be his greatest mistake. (Fiercely unsentimental, Murphy is nonetheless captured by the camera shedding a tear as he surveys the LCD Soundsystem equipment for the last time.)

But one can’t help getting the sense that the real reason is that there is no reason, that he stopped the band for the same reason he started it: because he could.

“I felt like it was shockingly easy; the fun was trying to make it casual, just saying ‘stop,’” said the musician, who was raised in suburban New Jersey and lives in Brooklyn. “I get a kick out of stuff like that, like someone asks you to use a song in an advertisement and wants to pay you a lot of money and you just go ‘Nah.’ Something about that is enjoyable. It keeps me feeling quite like myself.”

Or as Wood put it in an interview: “There’s a kind of logic to James stopping when he did, in an LCD Soundsystem-logic kind of way.”

Murphy said he found it hard to watch the film, particularly at moments when he was afraid he would veer into the kind of audience-pandering that performers usually engage in at a big venue.

“I hate when someone yells at a show ‘Are you guys ready?’ or something else that is meant to just get the crowd to go crazy. That’s for people with the souls of whores. Just…play your…songs,” he said. “I saw some video of Lady Gaga performing at Madison Square Garden and she’s saying ‘I had a tough childhood and no one thought I could make it.’ And I was like ‘…you, this isn’t therapy. You’re not speaking honestly in any way, shape or form.’”

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Nine months removed from the end of the band , things haven’t quieted down for Murphy, especially as he prepares for the Sundance hoopla. He said he has no plans of getting the band back together but is continuing to write music and deejay.

“I’ll probably make a stupid solo record and think, like everyone who does that, that it will do better than the other records. And probably nobody will care about it,” he said.

As for his feelings now about his decision, Murphy said it would be foolish to think he doesn’t contemplate what could have been. He has no intention of getting LCD Soundsystem back together, but that doesn’t mean he can easily quiet the voices in his head. “It’s not an argument that stops,” he said. ‘It kind of just keeps going.”

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-- Steven Zeitchik in Park City, Utah

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