Review: Shazam! (2019)

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Just your friendly neighbourhood sparky-man: DC/Warner Bros

SHAZAM! is a breath of fresh air. Not because it’s the first really good DC comics movie this decade (step forward WONDER WOMAN) or the first fun DC comics movie this decade (take a bow AQUAMAN) but because it’s the first earnest DC comics movie this decade.

Foster kid Billy Batson (Asher Angel) is deemed worthy by a wizard to wield an extraordinary power. By saying “Shazam” he transforms into a muscled superhero (Zachary Levi) with the power of six mythological figures. With forces of evil gathering, can Billy harness and control his new powers in time to defend his nearest and dearest?

You can definitely tell this was directed by a horror movie guy, David F Sandberg. There’s a scene where a scientist ill-advisedly reaches for the handle of an enchanted door and she barbecues alive before our eyes. Then there’s the Seven Deadly Sins demons ripping apart a full boardroom fleetingly seen through frosted glass. Nothing is on screen for long enough to increase the rating, but there’s some creepy imagery that’ll stay with the little ‘uns in the audience.

A lot of fun is to be had coming up with what a fourteen year-old would do with an adult stature, not to mention the joy of Zachary Levi acting someone less than half his age. The film would only land if they got the casting of both sides of Billy Batson’s character right, and while Levi has a lot of fun in the role, newcomer Asher Angel has to bear the brunt of the dramatic heavy lifting and does so in fine fashion. Jack Dylan Grazer stole the show as IT‘s Eddie and gets a lot of the laughs here as Billy’s disabled superhero-obsessed foster brother Freddie. Yes, Mark Strong is playing another villain, but Silvana has a few more shades than standard-issue baddies, arguably at the cost of story pacing early on.

Look out for a pleasing but expected explicit hat-tip to BIG, and ROCKY is also part of the film’s DNA what with its Philadelphia setting and working-class against-the-odds story. The film features what might be the best superhero joke since those muggers debated lifting Batman’s wallet to check his ID. It’s a situation I’m astounded has never been exploited for humour before (I don’t think). Not spoiling it, but it’s to do with superhero/supervillain proximity in their titanic final battles.

Shazam! (is that exclamation point becoming tedious yet? (!)) is that rare superhero movie that gets better as it goes on. Most, even the really good ones, tend to tail off. While I really enjoyed all the character building and most of the larky training montages, what the film becomes and how in its final stretch is truly something special. I’m not going into any more specifics at the moment because it’s not in any of the trailers. They also seem to have fun with teasing another dreary hero fight in the dark before relocating to the most brightly lit setting imaginable – the fairground.

Said brightly-lit action closer is a better Superman scene than anything actually involving Superman for over a decade, and for all the effects and the excitement what always matters foremost is we’re witnessing a hero saving civilians and his family from harm (you know, actually being a hero).

It’s nice to have such a down-to-earth superhero story as this, the relationship between a lonely, knocked-about kid and his new family being far more important than the admittedly spectacular super-fights. It’s similar to how the superlative SPIDER-MAN 2’s best scenes were out of spandex and dealing with real life and the myriad problems encountered therein.

It’s somewhat poetic that the comic book hero who was once more popular than Superman is now making a connection in the ways that the most recent take on the Man of Steel could not. Shazam! is pretty special, and a sign that DC/Warner Bros might finally be getting the message – get the basics right first. SSP

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Review in Brief: The Boy Who Harnessed the Wind (2019)

THE BOY WHO HARNESSED THE WIND is an assured and compelling directorial debut from Chiwetel Ejiofor, and another example of how important outlets like Netflix are for getting diverse filmmaking voices out there. It’s a very classically good-looking film which is no less than you’d expect from Mike Leigh’s go-to DP Dick Pope. Formal construction, clean and clear presentation of often ugly events. The film is divided into agricultural chapters: Sowing, Growing, Harvest…Hunger. Things gets pretty bleak for this Malawian farming family: “We can have one meal a day, we should decide which one” but there is always a glimmer of hope. William (Maxwell Simba) gets by because he’s intelligent, because he understands the workings of the world he stands on. To have the courage to say to a parent that he knows better, that he can save everyone if he is trusted with the responsibility shows his indomitable spirit. SSP

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Review: Us (2019)

us

See what I see? : Monkeypaw Productions/Dentsu

Well that’s 2 for 2 for Jordan Peele. He’s become a vibrant, distinctive and essential American filmmaking voice in what seems like no time at all, and while US can be compared to GET OUT on certain thematic levels, it’s entirely its own thing.

While on family vacation in Santa Cruz, Adelaide Wilson (Lupita Nyong’o) starts getting flashbacks to childhood trauma, a trauma that comes to terrifying life when sinister doubles of every member of her family invade their home…

The key question you’ve got to ask of a horror film is always, is it scary? For Us, that’s an emphatic yes. There are images in this film that’ll creep back up on you just as you fall asleep, even if you didn’t realise it at the time. There’s a great build of tension as well, released at intervals not usually with jump-scares but with genuinely disturbing imagery and bursts of violent action.

Being a Peele film Us is a thematically rich and layered stew. There are so many ways you could interpret the story, the symbolism, the characters and their copies. I see the meat of the piece as a commentary on incarceration; the voiceless and broken imprisoned settling a score with the privileged free. I was thinking more of Ava DuVernay’s documentary 13TH than any straight horror film. It’s no accident that we follow an African American, Middle-Class nuclear family as their lives could have diverged at so many points to result in less enviable circumstances.

Lupita Nyong’o works herself to the bone in this. A tangle of neuroses still recovering from trauma decades on, Adelaide is simultaneously her family’s strongest and weakest member. Removing someone’s eyebrows is an easy shortcut to making them look uncanny, but that’s just surface level. Combined with her rigidly controlled yet feral physicality and cracked voice, Nyong’o’s doppelgänger character is left the complete antithesis of our lead. Every actor playing one of the Wilsons had to bring to life two entirely different characters and they all serve their own important role in the story. Thank goodness Winston Duke brought the levity as bumbling well-meaning husband Gabe or it might have all been a little monotonous.

We’ve seen the evil twin/dark mirror image trope in horror films many a time before but never executed in quite this way. The final confrontation between Adelaide and her double is more like a deadly dance than a fight to the death, and all the more memorable for it. I’m struggling to think of another case where we’re asked to sympathise in any way with antagonists like these, where they’re ultimately presented as tragic and understandably flawed as well as terrifying.

Peele asks us to look a little closer at everything, to take nothing at face value as he flips our sympathies and understanding all the way around time after time. Us would definitely stand up to multiple watches, because there are clues to the myriad twists and turns peppered throughout if you’re looking out for them, not to mention the potential to completely change your perspective on events.

Again, like Get Out, Us works far better before everything is explained. There’s a great tension build and ideas galore punctuated by splatter violence, but then Peele attempts to provide an unnecessary pseudo-scientific explanation for the central premise. These concepts are far scarier if left as vague as possible.

Us will stay with you, its meaning and implications for not only the film world created but our own real screwed-up planet stubbornly refusing to sit neatly in a space in your mind. Peele has unleashed another gut-punch-as-entertainment that begs to be talked about. You’ll never be able to listen to “I got 5 on it” or go on a beach holiday without looking over your shoulder ever again. SSP

 

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Review: The White Crow (2018/19)

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More graceful than the average crow: BBC Films/Magnolia Mae Films

I may have been taken along to the odd ballet by my parents over the years, but I can’t claim to know anything much about it as an art form. I certainly hadn’t heard of Rudolf Nureyev, who I’ve been told was the male ballet dancer of the 60s and 70s. In his latest interesting choice of projects to direct, Ralph Fiennes has produced something that is eye-catching but strangely uninspiring.

In 1961, after refusing to return to the Soviet Union for fear of imprisonment, ballet dancer Rudolf Nureyev (Oleg Ivenko) handed himself in at a French airport and claimed political asylum in the West. This is the story of Nureyev’s burgeoning career and insatiable ambition up to the day of his defection.

Fiennes is a decent filmmaker but here the film editing is all over the shop. Plenty of decades-spanning biopics have worked really well, no matter how many times they zip back and forward. This is one of those rare occasions where a straight chronological telling of a story might have been more compelling. The film lacks a solid anchor to keep you focussed on what matters and the flashbacks and forwards, which have no real rhythm or purpose behind them, just ending up frustrating you at having to concentrate too hard on a story which, as told, isn’t all that interesting.

How could the story of such a passionate, determined and important dance talent defecting at the height of the Cold War not be gripping? Well, for a start the dance sequences, while sharply executed, don’t make the most of the medium they are being presented in, feeling like what they are: dancers being filmed with nothing extra to make the experience filmic. About the only occasion when you think The White Crow’s story being told on film reaches its full potential is when Nureyev takes in a beautiful panorama of Paris from atop a roof.

The defection storyline only gains traction in the last ten minutes, by which point it’s too late. The actors, chiefly Ivenko and Adèle Exarchopoulos as Ivenko’s Paris socialite friend Clara, do their best with the material but it’s not written in a way to make you care particularly strongly. Relationships are established, dropped and picked up again on a whim, and this is compacted by the time-skips.

Nureyev’s sexuality isn’t dwelled upon to any great length. We see him naked in bed with a man, presumably post-coital (a side note: I think it’s the first example I’ve seen of the British Board of Film Classification’s “non-sexualised nudity” in a 12A film) but he has a range of different relationships with women too. You’d have thought there’d be more drama to be derived from this aspect of his life – Nureyev’s Soviet minders only seem to object to how their prize dance troupe might make Mother Russia look by partying extravagantly in public. There’s no mention of the fact that Nureyev’s nightly dalliances in Paris were to gay bars, behaviour I’m sure would be punished particularly harshly in the 1960s.

The political aspect of the film works better than the emotional, which isn’t really saying much. I’d imagine dance companies are insular and competitive at the best of times, but in a world fueled by paranoia, where information is power and any wrong foot could lead to destruction, Soviet dance companies must have been on another level. While the constant threat of political imprisonment hanging over Nureyev (represented by bulky minders lurking in the background of every shot) is effective enough, this only seems in response to his hard-partying behaviour. Until the film’s final stretch he doesn’t really feel all that oppressed.

White Crow has good intentions and a certain level of craft to convincingly recreate the period, but for a variety of reason it leaves you cold. Maybe Rudolf Nureyev’s fascinating story would be better served in the form of a documentary, or a feature film that takes a few more risks. SSP

 

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Review: No Country for Old Men (2007)

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Out of time?: Miramax/Scott Rudin Productions

The Coen Brothers are two of the most distinctively voiced American filmmakers working today. Nobody else creates bleak mediations on existence or bittersweet morality tales quite like them at the top of their game. Their only Best Picture Academy Award win (why, Academy?) NO COUNTRY FOR OLD MEN finds itself somewhere in the middle, tonally speaking, but far towards the top of the pile in terms of craft and resonance.

A hunter becomes the hunted when he finds a suitcase full of money in the bloody aftermath of a drug deal. Llewelyn Moss (Josh Brolin) knows the Texan landscape and may have a few tricks up his sleeve to stay in front, but his pursuer Anton Chigurh (Javier Bardem) is relentless and without mercy…

It’s a pretty downbeat, pessimistic tale about pointless death and real evil going unpunished and yet you can’t escape a few trademark Coen dark comic barbs and witty asides. My favourite is Woody Harrelson’s snide response to his boss chastising him for sitting without permission, “You strike me as the kind of man who wouldn’t want to waste a chair”.

It’s easy to forget that this is a period movie given that it feels so timeless and fable-like. It’s Aesop with gallows humour and unfeeling violence. Roger Deakins’ peerless desert tableus makes these characters seem insignificant but their fight to survive insurmountable. Like his two-headed director, Deakins is obsessed by small details as well, a trait shared with the novella’s author Cormac McCarthy, who can happily spend two pages describing someone’s boots. Just look at how often characters are introduced identifying object-first, whether it’s distinctive clothing, a weapon, a vice in their life. The camera catches telling little details, things you’re going to have to pay attention to if you’re going to read every nuance in this rich tapestry.

Our hero (and I use that adjective pretty loosely) Llewelyn Moss is a pretty hopeless case, stumbling through life and surviving mostly by fluke. He can run in any direction but you always get a sense that he’s on borrowed time, that Texas isn’t big enough for him to hide from his pursuer for long. Yes, Tommy Lee Jones’ Sheriff Bell is a more conventional, morally upstanding hero, but he’s mostly a passive presence, always arriving too late to the carnage and unable to stop it. Agonisingly, we’re not given closure to Llewelyn and his wife Carla Jean’s (Kelly Macdonald) story. I mean, there’s an end, but we’re not privy to it and the ambiguous options we’re presented with are various shades of horrible.

Anton Chigurh has ideas above his station. He’s not only an unfeeling monster but a self-absorbed hypocrite. He maliciously mentally tortures his victims before putting them out of their misery, making them think they’re part of a grander plan and a more noble purpose. The way Bardem plays these scenes, dead-eyed and amused by his control over the lives and death of others, is chilling to the core. Few things in cinema are scarier than Bardem’s impassive expression as he kills. The only person who sees right through him, sees him for the empty vessel he is and calls him on his bullsh*t is Carla Jean.

No Country for Old Men is one of those Oscar winners that really holds up, that keeps delivering different thrills time after time of watching. Bardem may be the highlight horribilis, but you shouldn’t forget he sterling work put in by Brolin, Jones and Macdonald in the less-showy roles that ground the story and make it compelling. It really is one of the great films about humanity’s dark side and the world refusing to go your way. SSP

 

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The Fine Art of Black Comedy or Why It’s OK to Laugh When We Shouldn’t

https://www.thefilmagazine.com/art-of-black-comedy-why-its-ok-to-laugh-when-we-shouldnt/ SSP

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Series Retrospective: The Before Trilogy

Back to my semi (OK, I’ll be honest lately it’s been less) regular feature where I look back on a long-running film series and see how well each instalment has or hasn’t age. This time it’s Richard Linklater’s beloved naturalistic will-they-won’t-they sightseeing excursion, the BEFORE…Trilogy.

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Castle Rock Entertainment

BEFORE SUNRISE (1995) The premise – a chance encounter on a train convinces two travellers to spend an evening wandering, and talking, around Vienna – might not sound like the most riveting prospect. But Richard Linklater often sees unlikely potential and convinces you pretty quickly, in no small part thanks to leads Ethan Hawke and Julie Delpy making it the most compelling, relateable and swooning romance possible. It’s about life, the universe and everything in the most everyday way. The more-or-less continuous stream of  dialogue covers the mundane and the profound and everything in-between, but always coming back to how they both see their places in the world. Key passages of talk are the train scene for what matters on the surface and the pinball game in a bar later for what matters a little deeper. If you wanted to slap a message on this one, it’s that anything is possible; the film ends on an uncertain but hopeful note for Jesse and Celine, and a promise that we hope will be fulfilled.

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Castle Rock Entertainment

BEFORE SUNSET (2004) The best part of a decade later, they meet again, but was it fate, a fluke, or careful planning? For Linklater’s first sequel, he starts to get a bit meta, with Jesse being asked on the audience’s behalf, “Do you think they got back together after six months?” The question is answered, and it’s not a fairy tale ending. In real life, life itself just gets in the way… This one’s about the missed opportunity, and the emotional content is heightened immeasurably by Jesse and Celine both finding themselves in a less emotionally secure place, however the rest of their lives seems to be “sorted”. Key conversations here are the cafe scene for hope and laughter and the car journey for implosion and despair. You can see why they fell for each other, but you can also see which of their traits would drive the other mad. The realness doesn’t dilute the heady romance of it all, and it ends on one hell of a cliffhanger. But at least we knew we’d be seeing them both again this time.

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Castle Rock Entertainment

BEFORE MIDNIGHT (2013) So they finally got together for real, so there’s no need for another chance meeting. Instead of reconnecting with each other after a time apart, Jesse and Celine instead get to poetically reconnect with their younger selves. They comment on how rarely they get to walk, talk and not worry now they have children, how time has become all the more precious now they’ve hit 40. Another decade on and Hawke and Delpy do occasionally glimmer with the energy of their previous selves, at times it’s like the clock has been turned back to the spontaneity of the train to Vienna, before responsibility. Isn’t it shameful that in all three films everyone has to speak English because of Ethan Hawke? You’d have thought he (Jesse, not Ethan) would have made an effort by now. I’m also sure the music didn’t used to be this noticeable or intrusive, a rare point where the reality wobbles a bit. What brings you crashing back to the real is that this third chapter isn’t afraid to show the strain of maintaining a long relationship, and we’re under no illusions that this could be the end of their happily ever after.

The Before… Trilogy hasn’t aged a day, especially, weirdly, the first one. Characters we love to spend time with don’t really age, or at least we’re prepared to ignore their flaws out of sheer affection. Will we see Jesse and Celine again? I wouldn’t be at all surprised, but if we’re following the established pattern, we’ll have to wait until 2022. SSP

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Review in Brief: Isn’t It Romantic (2019)

Put ISN’T IT ROMANTIC down as a good idea badly executed. It’s the classic “bump your head and wake up in another world” story, with the differences between our world (in the loosest possible terms) and the world of the romantic comedy film in sight. They do get the sunny rom-com lighting right and nail on a few of the most tired tropes like everyone been unfeasibly hot and PG-13 censorship. But there are too few proper laughs and nowhere near enough warmth. Rebel Wilson has got comedy leading roles in her but she deserves much sharper and more memorable material. OK, the karaoke musical number scene is pretty good (“How’d they all know the choreography?”) but that’s because it’s one of few scenes where everyone comes alive for a few minutes and perhaps the only sequence where Wilson is let loose to do what she does best. SSP

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Review: Captain Marvel (2019)

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Jack always thought his Ma was marvelous… : Marvel/Disney

It only took Marvel 21 movies. Now she’s finally taken flight. CAPTAIN MARVEL like GUARDIANS OF THE GALAXY before it, could be the first stage of a colourful cosmic journey for the superhero superfactory.

An encounter with shapeshifting Skrull foes gives Kree commando Vers (Brie Larson) flashbacks to another life on a more primitive world. Her search for answers leads her to Earth where she teams up with SHIELD agent Nick Fury (Samuel L Jackson) to defend the planet from an invasion on multiple fronts.

There’s an appealing dynamic between Carol and Fury from their first meeting in a Blockbuster carpark. Neither like sticking to procedure if there’s a more efficient way of getting things done. They look at each other’s respective worlds with wry amusement but see eye-to-eye on a great many things. The effects job on getting Jackson back to looking in his 40s is pretty seamless, though I suppose your subject being extremely well-preserved to start with must help. It’s great to see Larson have a bit of fun again after years of intense work and she’s great with Jackson; I really hope there’s a way to have him stay part of her extended family once the whole Finger Snap thing has been dealt with.

It’s so refreshing to have the superhero’s main civilian relationship be one of close platonic friendship, and Carol and Maria (Lashana Lynch) have such warm chemistry you regret that the film’s slow reveal story structure puts many of their key bonding moments on the back foot. I get that the amnesia plot device gives Carol a journey, but there’s no reason why we as an audience couldn’t be shown more than the briefest of flashes of their previous life together.

Who’d have thought they’d finally let Ben Mendelsohn use his native accent here, under the heaviest prosthetics of his career? His take on Skrull leader Talos is unexpected to say the least, but he has a lot of fun taking his usual antagonist performance in a different direction. Great efforts are made to make the Skrulls different to the run-of-the-mill invading green aliens, and while I’m not sure this take will satisfy all fans I found that great morphing effects, seamless makeup and the unexpected depth given to Marvel’s most famous extraterrestrials really made them memorable.

The 1990s trappings that have been made so much of in the marketing are just window dressing and don’t amount to all that much aside from a pleasing soundtrack and a well-timed gag about crappy computers. What’s not disposable is the presence of Goose the cat, who is key (but I’m not telling you why).

While the film has all the usual Marvel gloss and visual splendour, I was looking for a few more individual images that lingered. The fights are solidly put together but not the most creative in the universe, we’re not given the time to explore and soak up an entirely new culture like in BLACK PANTHER, the weird stuff is first-base compared to the sights of DOCTOR STRANGE and even the indelible sight of Captain Marvel fully powered up and ready to blast henchmen and spaceships alike doesn’t deliver the tingle that WONDER WOMAN striding across No-Man’s Land did.

With the Guardians in movie limbo post-ENDGAME, Captain Marvel seems like the next most likely candidate to carry the more out-there cosmic/space opera side of the Marvel universe forward. There are visual and character references to what James Gunn established in his films, no surprise given the involvement of Nicole Perlman again, but they seem to be saving the great leaps forward for the sequel.

Captain Marvel is a solid foundation for a franchise and it has literally any direction in the universe to jet off in. Like all of Marvel’s origin movies it does its job well, and it tells a story long, long overdue, but it leaves you more excited about films to come than an imminent revisit to this one. SSP

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Review: Bohemian Rhapsody (2018)

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It’s a kind of Malek (sorry): GK Films/New Regency Pictures

Well I’ve finally watched BOHEMIAN RHAPSODY, and it’s fine. But doesn’t such an icon as Freddie Mercury deserve a little more than just fine?

Before they were legends of rock, Queen were experimental unknowns with a dentally challenged lead singer from Zanzibar. Freddie Mercury’s (Rami Malek) vocal gymnastics and the band’s sheer talent and memorability brought them success around the world, but not without a cost.

To be honest, after all the behind-the-scenes drama, I’m amazed the film has turned out as coherent as it has. It’s not a particularly revelatory take on the band’s formation, ups or downs, but it moves along briskly enough.

Malek absolutely nails Freddy’s physicality and he has presence even if the script doesn’t really allow for him to explore any hidden depths. It’s not all about the frontman, though his private life takes up a good amount of the screentime, and in fact the film works better as a biopic of Queen the band. The scenes in the recording studio and the unconventional techniques employed to produce their unique sound, particularly for their first mega-hit album “Night at the Opera” are a treat for any fans of the band.

The film’s best material is the obsessively detailed recreation of Queen’s live performances. The Live Aid set piece at the end crackles with energy and the dynamic cinematography is pleasing, though the effects used to recreate the stadium and crowds could have probably done with another pass, having not quite lost their CG-sheen.

Fear not, Mercury’s sexuality is not glossed over as was earlier rumoured. Whether this was changed in re-shoots after the damaging early press coverage is unclear, but what we see is an explicitly bisexual Freddie. What we actually see is pretty tame, but we will likely never get the warts and all exploration of his sexual excesses (that originally cast Sacha Baron Cohen reportedly wanted to get into) while his bandmates are still alive.

Having Queen keeping such a close eye on everything has sapped so much life out of this film. I get them wanting to protect their late friend’s legacy and wanting equal credit for the band’s success, but when you’re stopping your film dead to cut to May (Gwilym Lee) or Taylor (Ben Hardy) nodding encouragement (understandably lampooned already on Twitter) or reminding the audience for the fifth time that they were well-educated guys in addition to being rockstars, then you’ve got a problem.

Did they really put Mike Myers in this just to have an excuse for a cheap WAYNE’S WORLD joke? I think they did.

Thank goodness that Queen single-handedly saved Live Aid and ended hunger in Africa. Elton J-who? David Bo-why? Just in case you’re not swept up by the showmanship and the crowd’s roars weren’t clue enough that this was the best act of the day, the point is hammered home by charity types forlornly manning the silent phones until Queen take to the stage and open the public’s hearts. It’s this kind of hagiography that is so often the result of people making films about themselves and their mates.

I can’t get too worked up about much of this. What I struggle with is using Freddy Mercury’s HIV-positive diagnosis to give them all the impetus to take the gig. I think they actually took the job because not doing so when every other big name in British music was making an appearance would look bad. Never mind dramatic licence, that just feels a little bit icky.

I’d have preferred to feel stronger either way about Bohemian Rhapsody. It’s far from an insult to Freddie Mercury’s memory and it does celebrate Queen’s music in energetic fashion. But where’s the heart? Where’s the nuance? Where’s the storytelling beats not copied wholesale from Every Music Biopic Ever? SSP

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