Film Reviews, News & Competitions

 
 


Beyond The Lights

 
 
Film Information
 

Plot: A young singer struggles with her identity and the pressures of being in the public spotlight.
 
Release Date: 29th June 2015
 
Format: DVD
 
Director(s): Gina Prince-Bythewood
 
Cast: Gugu Mbatha-Raw, Nate Parker, Minnie Driver
 
BBFC Certificate: 12
 
Running Time: 116 mins
 
Country Of Origin: USA
 
Review By: Sam Haysom
 
Genre: ,
 
Film Rating
 
 
 
 
 


 

Bottom Line


Shows a clear understanding of the internal conflicts and struggles that everyone fights with on a daily basis – even the people whose lives are most desired and celebrated in the public eye.


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Posted June 18, 2015 by

 
Film Review
 
 

Beyond the Lights is peppered with the constant blink and flash of cameras. Wherever main character Noni goes she is followed by the persistent call of strangers, with every moment spent in the public eye recorded, photographed and witnessed by dogged paparazzi and screaming fans. It’s exhausting to watch. You think it’s going to stop after awhile but it’s relentless and, eventually, irritating – it’s also a clever backdrop to a film that has a lot to say about the dark side of fame.

Writer-director Gina Prince-Bythewood’s third feature film follows an up-and-coming singer on the brink of releasing her debut album; Noni (played brilliantly by Gugu Mbatha-Raw) is a Rihanna-esque superstar with an overbearing mother (Minnie Driver) and a quiet personality that’s at odds with the provocative figure she portrays for the media. After a chance encounter with a police officer (Nate Parker) who has identity issues of his own, Noni’s lifestyle – and the glitzy world that’s been constructed around her – starts to crack and crumble.

Although Beyond the Lights is a comment on the world of celebrity and the objectifying treatment of those in the public eye, it’s also a film about depression and the vast gulf between how someone’s life can look on the outside and how they’re actually feeling beneath the surface. “I feel like I’m suffocating in the street and no one can see me dying,” says Noni, after smashing her framed magazine covers in the aftermath of an argument with her mother. It’s one of the rare occasions when she lets her armour down, and what she says resonates throughout the film. For the most part, Prince-Bythewood’s script gets the balance right between what the characters say and how they act, giving the actors enough room to perform while reinforcing their stories with well-handled dialogue. It’s not completely perfect – there are a couple of moments when the script borders on cheese, for instance – but the majority of the time it feels realistic enough.

Perhaps the theme that comes through the strongest in the film, though, is the danger of overbearing parents. Minnie Driver is excellent as Noni’s forceful, controlling mother, putting her mark on the film – and her daughter’s life – in the very opening sequence, in which she storms out of a talent contest before forcing a younger Noni to throw away her runner-up prize. Police officer Kaz’s difficult relationship with his father, while slightly more subtle, is also a telling insight into the confusion that can result from a parent thinking they know exactly what it is that their child wants from the world.

Prince-Bythewood does a good job of weaving all these themes together and, although the end result could be slightly more polished, shows a clear understanding of the internal conflicts and struggles that everyone fights with on a daily basis – even the people whose lives are most desired and celebrated in the public eye.


Sam Haysom

 


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