Displaying items by tag: Damon Herriman

Thursday, 02 January 2025 12:07

Better Man

better man

BETTER MAN

Australia/UK, 2024, 134 minutes, Colour.

Robbie Williams, Jonno Davies, Steve Pemberton, Alison Steadman, Kate Mulvaney, Damon Herriman, Fraser Hadfield, Raechelle Banno, Tony Budge, Anthony Hayes, John Waters.

Directed by Michael Gracey.

 

Whether you know all about British singer, Robbie Williams and his extensive and successful career, or whether you know nothing about him, this film is an extraordinary cinema, cinematic, experience.

It is based on the Robbie Williams memoir. And, while this film might be called a portrait or a biopic, it takes a different path from the usual. It is an overview of William’s career (though checking on his initial years in the boy band, Take That, then his solo career, reuniting with Take That, collaborating with many artists, tours, it reveals that there is far far more to his activities and success than the film indicates). But, it might be also described as a portrait of Robbie Williams psyche, his confidence and lack of confidence, his self-image, self-deprecating yet highly assertive, alcohol and drug addiction for many decades, erratic antics and behaviour, exploration of family connections, and massive success and awards which might have been his hopes but more than his expectations.

And, the way to do this? The device of Robbie Williams appearing as a chimpanzee. On paper, this might have sounded too risky. However, in the introductory sequences, Robert as a little boy, bullied, emulating his singing father, concern from his hard-working mother, support from a doting grandmother, he does appear as a chimpanzee and the audience is willing to accept this. And, a tribute to British actor, Jono Davies, who appears for the most part as Williams, the Robbie Williams himself, behind the mask, as himself in his later years. With the chimpanzee prosthetics and CGI effects, Davies is still able to create a credible and complex character, in performance, in song, in his torments.

Much of the film was made in Australia Australian director, Michael Gracey (with a background of visual effects and commercials), who entertained audiences with The Last Show man. There are some British actors like Jono Davies, Steve Pemberton as Pete Conway, Williams ambitious to entertain father, and a pleasing Alison Steadman as the devoted grandmother. But, a great number of the rest of the cast are Australians, led by Damon Herriman as producer, Nigel  Martin Smith, Kate Mulvaney as William’s mother, Anthony Hayes as producer, and even veteran John Waters as Michael Parkinson in an interview.

To describe this portrait as a “warts and all” expose is an enormous understatement!

So, while the device of having Williams appear in monkey form tells us to look at him differently, especially in his depressed moments, seeing hostile chimpanzee variations of himself in the audiences, condemning him, there is a great deal of virtuoso filmmaking, special effects and editing, for instance a huge musical extravaganza sequence in Regent Street in London, the crowds at the Williams concerts and their adulation, contrasting with quiet moments of personal anguish, the sequence of the funeral of his grandmother.

For those who have followed Williams for more than 30 years in his career, the Take That era and his solo career, there is an enormous range of his songs included here. But the whole film is framed by one song that highlights the initial ambitions, the ups and downs of the career, the downs and ups of personal life, the seeking of help, coming through with the lyrics of doing all he could to become a Better Man, the song lyrics for William’s life, especially as he stands on stage singing with his father, enabling his father to take a bow, the Frank Sinatra-gospel affirmation: My Way.

  1. Title, Robbie Williams and his song, his ambitions to be a Better Man while doing it “My Way”?
  2. Audience knowledge of Robbie Williams, his career, popularity, awards? The boy band, Take That? His solo career? Preparations? Songs and lyrics? Ups and downs? How much does audience knowledge of him affect the response to the film?
  3. The film based on Williams’ memoir, his honesty, being candid, warts and all, strengths and failures? His origins, bullied as a boy, love of music, his father and his singing, entertaining, leaving, the separation for long years? His working mother and support? His doting grandmother? Her encouragement, his ability to sing, the enjoyment of the Pirates of Penzance concert, nervousness, showing off, applause?
  4. The impact of the device of his appearance as monkey, “less evolved than other people”, the psychological effect for the audience, acceptance, interpretation? His own self-image? The aptness of the monkey facade, appearance? And the audience accepting this throughout the film? The versatility of Jono Davies performance’, acting, singing, stagecraft, but also the brooding and quiet episodes? And the effect of the various images of himself, monkeys, in the audience, criticising and condemning him? And, in the final sequences, Robbie Williams himself?
  5. The film as a psychodrama, Robbie Williams commentary on himself, his ambitions and hopes, yet putting himself down, comparisons with his father, bullied at football, the success in the play at school, the joining with the young men of Take That, the role of Nigel Martin Smith, organiser, shrewd, getting performances, rehearsing, songs and lyrics, Gary Bowler as the lead, yet Robbie Martin lead singing, Smith naming him Robbie, the impact and range of performances of the songs?
  6. Williams at 16, in his teens, success, the gay clubs, popularity, the concerts for young women and their acclaim? The effect on Williams? Self-image, clashes with the group, spoiling performances, acting like a spoiled brat? Depression sequences, the driving, the oncoming vehicles, swerving into the water, the swarm of fans in the water, his coming to the surface?
  7. The possibility of going solo, Chambers changing him, listening to the song, arranging it, the continued collaboration over the years?
  8. Success, his father, his entertaining in the small clubs and groups, changing his name, leaving, pride in his son, turning up after many years, trying to make contact? The support of his mother, her presence at the concerts, with his grandmother? The crucial moment of his performance, his mother phoning, the news of his grandmother’s death, the transition to the cemetery, the burial, and his later taking the TV to her grave? (And the very British touches with their watching the two Ronnies – and the image of the two Ronnies towards the end of the film?)
  9. Success, reviews, concerts, collaborations, tours? The interview with Michael Parkinson, sitting on his lap, the smart remarks, self-confidence and self-doubt?
  10. The significance of the group therapy encounter?
  11. The encounter with Nicole Appleton, on the boat, her gradual revelation herself, the communication, the relationship, the significance of Oasis and the comparisons, Liam Gallagher, the drugs? The break with Nicole, at the house, his secluding himself in the bathroom, her shock, leaving him?
  12. His ambition to play at Knebville, the discussions, eventually arriving there, the crowds, the performance, the doubts, the surreal image of his fighting the battle with all the images of himself and conquering them?
  13. The portrait of the members of Take That, in themselves, their talent, the success, the clashes with Robbie, his leaving, Nigel Martin Smith and his contempt for Robbie, watching him leave? But the later reconciliation with Gary and the others? Performances?
  14. The finale, on stage, his father present, the background of their confrontation, Gary lying on the water, his father going into the water, the interchange, Robbie wanting his father support for Robert? His father’s self-awareness, at the concert, on stage, their singing together, his father finally taking a bow having said he was happy just to entertain one person with all that he had?
  15. Robbie Williams aged 50 at the time of the release of the film, looking back at his life? And life ahead?
Published in Movie Reviews
Wednesday, 18 December 2024 12:08

How to Make Gravy

how gravy

HOW TO MAKE GRAVY

Australia, 2024, 120 minutes, Colour.

Daniel Henshall, Hugo Weaving, Agathe Rousselle, Brenton Thwaites, Damon Herriman, Kate Mulvaney, Benedict Hardie, Fayssal Bazzi, Kieran Darcy-Smith, Kim Gyngell, Jonah Wren Phillips, Adam Briggs.

Directed by Nick Waterman.

Paul Kelly has been a musical icon in Australia for decades, singer and performer, composer, strong songs and lyrics. This film is based on his Christmas song, How to make Gravy, 1996 (the lyrics can be found by Googling). Producer, Meg Washington and her partner, director, Nick Waterman, have elaborated on the characters and situations in the song, creating a narrative – and introducing a most sympathetic character, not in the song, the prisoner, Noel.

The film has a Queensland setting, an extended family gathering for Christmas, the background of grief with the central character, Joe (Daniel Henshall) grieving the death of his mother. There is his wife, Rita (French actress Agatha Rousselle), his young son Angus (Jonah Wren Phillips) young daughters. For the Christmas dinner, his sister and brother, uncles, some of the guests are initially jovial, the grief surfacing, Joe highly aggressive towards his brother-in-law, a fight, the police, in prison.

In prison, Joe is victimised by a fellow prisoner, have Red, and other bullying prisoners. Joe has no anger management and fights back, to his detriment. His wife visiting, his son would like to visit, he has phone calls, but the families not sure how he is bearing up in prison.

Where the original song narrative is enhanced is the introduction of a most sympathetic life-sentence prisoner, Noel (Christmas name and ultimately his wearing the Santa Claus hat), a sympathetically vigorous performance from Hugo Weaving. Noel is charge of the prison kitchen, offers Joe a job, Joe offering his family’s recipe for making gravy. There are some jovial and joyful scenes in the kitchen, the cooking, and, eventually, the chaplain providing some wine for the gravy recipe.

Echoing Paul Kelly’s Catholic background, there is a young chaplain, not many in his congregation, a bit desperate. And there is a prisoners’ choir who perform with zest.

In the meantime, the screenplay offers the difficulties at home, Angus and his tensions, his musician uncle trying to help out at home (Brenton Thwaites), Joe in an angry outbur but provoked st being prevented from seeing his wife and son at Christmas.

How does the film bring everything to a climax – Angus angry with his mother and uncle, running away, going to the prison – but a kindly guard allowing Angus in and a happy reconciliation with his father. And the kindly Noel effecting some peace in the prison.

A film for Australian audiences to enjoy – with the hope that others will enjoy it as well.

  1. Paul Kelly’s song, popular, Christmas, prison, family? A dramatisation of the song?
  2. The Queensland setting, the town, home for Christmas, the prison, exteriors, interiors, the kitchen, the yard and fights? The musical score, the range of songs, music and lyrics?
  3. The Christmas theme, the first Christmas, 51 weeks later? Introduction to Joe, lying on his bed, Angus urging him awake, preparing for Christmas, the grief at the death of his mother, his relationship with his wife, daughters? The guests arriving for Christmas, the uncles, his sister and Roger, Dan, the separation, his daughter?
  4. The tension at the table, the speeches, the conversation, aftermath, family tensions, criticisms, squabbles, Joe and his aggression, Roger, the fight, the calling of the police?
  5. Joe in jail, his angers, his grief, the visits from his wife and their talking, his son wanting to visit, the phone calls? The routines of the prison, Joe being picked on, Red his associates, the violence, Joe as victim? The other prisoners, life in the prison?
  6. Noel, his Christmas name, Hugo Weaving’s presence, in jail for life, yet his attitudes, offering to help Joe, offering him the job in the kitchen, Joe and his return, the rules, the attendance at the meetings, the significance of the meeting, Joe telling his story, the response of the men? Joe and the recipe for gravy, the ingredients, no wine? The bonding with the men in the kitchen, the preparation of the meals? The preparation for Christmas, the detail? Joe at home in the kitchen, going to the concert, looking forward to Angus’s visit? Red picking on him, the fight, his being prevented from seeing his son?
  7. The men in the kitchen, the choir practices, the priest, talking with the men, the concert, the sermon, his drinking the wine, his bringing the wine as a gift for the gravy? Noel’s intervention?
  8. Rita and the children at home, Dan moving in, helping, the girls coping, the pressure on Rita, her love for Joe, her mother’s phone calls, her choices? Dan and his support? The dancing, Angus’s anger? Going to see Joe with Angus, his not being allowed the visit?
  9. Dan, his daughter, the woman across the street, her bullying sons picking on Angus, the fight? Her chatting with Dan, the sexual encounter? And having to come to terms with himself and Mary? Her saying she had forgiven him?
  10. Stella, with Roger, the visit to Joe, the tensions with Roger, the bouquet, his presence at the meal, the only one at home during the search, talking with John on the phone, the apology? Stella and the future with him, saying her choice was family or Roger?
  11. Angus, the upset, seeing his mother in Dan, running away, the search, the desperation? The bike, the dog and the bus, Paul Kelly as the driver, going to the prison, the sympathetic guard and surveillance, letting Angus in, keeping the dog? Bringing Joe to the visiting room, revealing Angus, the embrace?
  12. Joe and his final confrontation with Red, standing up to him and his bullying? Noel making him to go to the concert? Getting the meal, some kind of peace?
  13. The Christmas ending, family reconciliations, hope for the future?
Published in Movie Reviews
Tuesday, 16 July 2024 12:24

Bikeriders, The

bikeriders

THE BIKERIDERS

 

US, 2023, 116 minutes, Colour.

Jodie Comer, Austin Butler, Tom Hardy, Michael Shannon, Mike Faist, Boyd Holbrook, Norman Reedus, Damon Herriman, Beau Knapp, Emory Cohen, Karl Glusman, Toby Wallace.

Directed by Jeff Nichols.

 

1965 to 1973, a photojournalist, Danny Lyon, followed a bike club in America’s midwest, interviews, photographs, chronicling characters and events and ultimately publishing a book. This film is based on his book and photos, some of which appear during the final credits.

1969 was the year of Easy Rider, popular at the box office, awards, riding motorbikes.

For audiences who enjoy the adrenaline pumping of motorbike riding, this can be a vroom, VROOM experience. For those interested in masculinity in American Midwest society during the period, this is a macho, MACHO experience. Which raises many questions. (And, early in the film, the club leader, Johnny, refers to the 1955 Marlon Brando motorcycle movie, The Wild One.)

Danny Lyon’s observations and photos were of a club culture in the late 1960s, clubs for men who like riding bikes, jackets and jeans, non-stop smoking, drinking in their club-pub, out riding like a phalanx on the streets and open highways, generally working class men, critical of college educated men, rarely at home, and a few groupie women tagging along.

While this is a picture of the men in the club, the perspective of director, Jeff Nichols, is often that of a central female in this story. Her name is Kathy. She is played by British Jodie Comer, a very strong and commanding performance, being interviewed by Lyon in the mid-60s and then after the events in 1973. Most of the action is shown in flashback, her story of what it happened.

At first, Kathy is sheltered and rather naive, meeting a friend in the club’s pub, harassed, wanting to leave until she glimpses Benny a young sandy-haired moustachioed tall biker whom we have seen previously in an opening sequence, sitting at a bar, proud of his club jacket, announcing his club The Vandals, and severely bashed by two large rednecks from another gang. Kathy is smitten and within weeks is married to Benny.

The film is a showpiece for Austin Butler (after Elvis and Dune 2) but while he is visually striking, and a presence, his character seems one-dimensional (perhaps two-dimensional) and he does not make the impact on the audience that he does for Kathy and for the leader of the club, Johnny, who wants Benny to take over (and we are thinking, as if!). And, Tom Hardy, strong actor as he is, is not always persuasive as Johnny, the president of the club, not always quick on the uptake.

The club sometimes seems a local bikie equivalent of a cult, a leader exercising power (violently), his lieutenants loyal, the rest of the club eager to submit, and members from other bikie groups wanting to join The Vandals.

At this stage of the 1960s, these groups were clubs rather than gangs. There was some personal drugtaking but not dealing. There were tough macho attitudes and behaviour towards women (with Kathy targeted a number of times and becoming more desperate until she could not take it any longer) as Well Is towards men, rivals.

The Bikeriders shows the transition from club to gang, drug dealing, killings, the rise of the lawless leaders – and, going back to the 1960s, we can see that the macho attitude leads to masculine supremacy, to white supremacy, to the hate groups of the 21st-century.

While Jodie Comer and Tom Hardy are British, there are substantial roles for Australians, Damon Herriman as Johnny’s lieutenant and Toby Wallace as the upstart future gang leader. Michael Shannon has appeared in Jeff Nichols films (Take Shelter, Midnight Special) and has some fine cameo speeches here lamenting his not being accepted for Vietnam, and his continued inferiority criticism of Pinkos (those men who are college educated).

Not exactly an enjoyable film but a challenge to thinking about clubs, gangs, supremacists, and the domination of males in this kind of society.

  1. The title and the focus, the bike clubs, the later development into gangs, male supremacy…?
  2. The origins of the film, Danny Lyon following the clubs, 1965-1973, the era of Easy Rider? The Vietnam War? The interviews, the two interviews with Kathy, her memories, the range of photos? Seen during the credits?
  3. The initial impact of the bar scene, Benny, drinking, the two rednecks, challenging his jacket, his refusal, the bashing, his injuries? The later return to the hotel, the fear of the owner, giving up the names, and Johnny burning down the hotel?
  1. Danny Lyon and his work, personality, with Kathy, observing, discussing, photos, the book? In the final credits? The interviews with Kathy, her age, manner, way of speaking, idiom, the story of going to the club, her friend, the reactions, touching her, leaving, the glimpse of Benny, the attraction? The explanation of Benny, with him, married within five weeks? Her perspective on the club, on the men, on the riders? Verbalising them? Her memories visualised?
  2. The nature of the clubs, the men, the few women tagging along, their enjoying their own company, macho, talk, tough, drinking, continued smoking, the leader, Johnny, his control, the loyal lieutenants, the loyalty to the group, devotion to their bikes, bidding in groups along the streets and highways?
  3. Benny, his character, one-dimensional, his place in again, loyalty to Johnny, follower, the relationship with Kathy, at home watching television, absent with the group, present at the picnics and the club gatherings? The later challenge to Johnny, his rushing in, his being bashed, his foot injury, hospital? Kathy and her reaction, growing more distant and disapproving, Johnny take him aside, wanting him to be his successor as leader? Benny and the final confrontations, Johnny’s death, his disappearance? 1973, returning to Kathy, then moving to Florida, seeing him at his job?
  4. Johnny, character, leader, the later surprise discovery that he had wife and children, his leadership, Bruce and the other lieutenants, loyal and agreeing with him, decisions, slow on the uptake at times, power, violence, the knife fight, the members from the other group his decision, the young upstarts, wanting the leader to come alone and refusing him because of his disloyalty to the group, the later attack, the upstart and his death?
  5. Similarities of the clubs to cults, the leader, loyalties, power and responsibilities? The sketches of the other members of the group, Bruce and his loyalty, Cal and his military background…? The groups together, the righting, talk, the bars, the episode of the red dress and the attack on Kathy, the intervention?
  6. The young upstart, his manner in the town, with his parents, his group, wanting to join, Johnny demanding the test, his failing, ready to abandon his group, the later return, violence, his agreement knife fight, shooting Johnny?
  7. The transition from bike clubs to buy gangs, issues of masculinity, attitudes towards women, the changes in the latter 20th century, feminism? The gangs, drug dealing, violence? And the transition to mail supremacists and the groups in gangs of the 21st-century?
Published in Movie Reviews