The article “Good Vibrations” was
published by Robbie Collin on March 28, 2013. It discussed Robbie Collin
reviews Good Vibrations, a biopic of Belfast punk impressario Terri Hooley.
In addition, is life really as
formulaic as biopics make it look? The plot trajectory of Good Vibrations is so
predictable you could chart it with a quadratic equation. This is a genial and
generous account of the career of Belfast
punk impresario Terri Hooley, best known as the man who discovered The
Undertones and some other rough gems, while both The Troubles and his troubles
took their toll.
Speaking of this situation, the
expected story beats are hit in the usual order: the humble beginnings, the
arrival of the supportive wife (Jodie Whittaker, doing good work in a boring
role), the vital strokes of luck, the equally vital strokes of genius, the
backbreak, the heartache, and finally the vindication.
It’s necessary to point out that Colin
Carberry and Glenn Patterson’s script gives Hooley some lovely lines to say,
while perhaps cutting him a little too much slack. Belfast of the Seventies and Eighties feels
right, too: Co-directors Lisa Barros D’Sa and Glenn Leyburn are good on tactile
details like flat beer and chunky coins; they also let the music speak for
itself. This is no 24 Hour Party People (2002), but it induces all the tingles
that the title promises.
In
conclusion I’d like to say that Richard Dormer is a Northern Irish actor,
playwright and screenwriter. And I think Richard Dormer is a hairy tuffet of
charisma in the lead role here.
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