- Starring
- Marisa Abela, Eddie Marsan, Jack O'Connell
- Director
- Sam Taylor-Johnson
- Rating
- R
- Genre
- Biography, Drama, Music
- Release date
- May 17, 2024
Overall Score
Rating Overview
Rating Summary
Amy Winehouse was a British singer-songwriter known for her soulful voice and distinctive style. Her second album, “Back to Black,” released in 2006, catapulted her to international fame with its raw and emotionally charged tracks, including hits like “Rehab” and “Back to Black.” Despite her undeniable talent, Winehouse faced personal struggles with addiction and mental health issues, tragically passing away in 2011 at the age of 27.
Back to Black
“Back to Black” is a 2024 biographical drama film based on the life of British singer-songwriter Amy Winehouse, portrayed by Marisa Abela. It delves into Winehouse’s rise to fame, tumultuous relationships, and the making of her Grammy-winning album, “Back to Black.”
Back to Black Review
In a film glorifying a manic alcoholic, “artiste” spiraling out of control only to crash land into an early grave, Back to Black benefits from capable, surprisingly self-restrained hands behind the camera. Directed by Sam Taylor-Johnson (50 Shades of Grey) and shot by cinematographer Polly Morgan (The Woman King), Back to Black never manages to engender non-fans to its subject or build any emotional bonds to the narrative.
Furthermore, the film’s earnest performances never quite transcend to captivating. This is almost entirely due to the light in which Winehouse is portrayed as emotionally immature and seemingly unpleasant. Further hindering the actors is the prioritization of intervals that ostensibly took place between more traditionally interesting dramatic moments, robbing the performers of their chance to stretch and shine and stealing any opportunity for the audience to connect.
One notable example is that of a drug-induced fight between Whinehouse and her husband. In lieu of what must have been an emotionally charged confrontation and the almost certainly empathetically identifiable details leading up to it, the film depicts the conclusion of them chasing one another down several very public streets and its quick resolutive embrace.
Perhaps this resolution would feel meaningful if we were ever given a reason to bond with the characters outside of Amy’s talent. Unfortunately, even her adoration for her grandmother (one of the only interpersonal relationships even mildly explored in the film) is portrayed as shallowly based on her “style” and early sexual exploits. The same can be said for the alcoholism for which Winehouse is as well known as for that of her music. While she is regularly shown drowning her feelings in a bottle, the root cause of her addiction isn’t much explored beyond the sentiment, “That’s just Amy.”
Without a doubt, Winehouse was a beautiful vocalist and a talented composer. However, the over-celebrated perceived “edginess” of her beehive hairdo, ample tattoos, and tendency to intersperse crass lyrics and curse words into traditional-sounding soulful jazz, along with her unfortunate and virtually unexplored substance abuse, isn’t enough to carry a nearly two-hour narrative.
WOKE ELEMENTS
NOTE: I would have rated the Woke-O-Meter lower save for the fact that the film strongly portrayed the importance of a loving father in Winehouse’s life. Despite some of her lyrics, the film also clearly showed that she yearned for a more traditional life as a wife and mother. Subsequently, it boosted the percentage.
Dash of Man-Hate
- Some of the lyrics to songs sung early in the film glorify the degradation of men.
This One is Tough
- The big one—the one that cost the movie most of the 50 points that I removed but could arguably be ignored or cause to mark the movie as completely Woke—is that of its message. Winehouse is portrayed as a manic and substance abuser who repeatedly physically abused her husband and ultimately killed herself with alcohol. She’s also (especially in the first half of the film) portrayed as an unlikable and sarcastic brat who is overly dramatic, rude, and thoughtless. However, it’s very difficult to tell whether the film’s tone is one of celebrating these qualities as the mark of a “strong, independent woman” who carved out her own path or if it intends to show how these personality traits led to her early demise.
- Ultimately, I heavily penalized it due to the film’s last line, a narrated reading from a letter Winehouse wrote as a young(er) girl. It read something to the effect that she just had to be herself. This would suggest a celebration even though “being herself” meant dying of alcohol poisoning before the age of 30.
James Carrick
James Carrick is a passionate film enthusiast with a degree in theater and philosophy. James approaches dramatic criticism from a philosophic foundation grounded in aesthetics and ethics, offering insight and analysis that reveals layers of cinematic narrative with a touch of irreverence and a dash of snark.
7 comments
Bob
May 19, 2024 at 10:54 am
This society gives a pass to all musicians for their repulsive behaviors and then tend to worship them for it.
Janis was a druggie and drunk and slept with anything and everyone, but is given a pass due to being unattractive and being made fun of. Keith Moon was so one dimensional that they can’t even write an autobiography about him due to him doing nothing other then drugs and women. Keith Richards had it all but wasted it being a junkie. Kurt Corban was just a whiny spoiled doper.
It’s would be hard to make any of these people seem like anything other then bratty unlikable spoiled brats who used everything as an excuse for their bad behavior. Woke is nothing new, there is just a name for it now.
Sweet Deals
May 19, 2024 at 7:12 pm
I happen to regularly listen to an ancient Stygian philosophy: “Don’t be fooled by the radio, the TV or the magazines. They show you photographs of how your life should be, but they’re just someone else’s fantasies.” It’s just as true today as it was back in 1977.
Dennis DeYoung was a chart-topping singer, songwriter and keyboard player, and he was honest enough to say throughout his career that being a famous celebrity isn’t as easy or cool as the media hype made it look. Being a talented performer didn’t make him an idol to be worshiped. It just made him an ordinary person who made good money writing and singing songs people enjoyed. Even famous celebrities have problems just like everyone else.
Bunny With a Keyboard
May 26, 2024 at 5:25 pm
It’s far more true today with filters and Photoshop to change how those pictures even look. That used to only be a thing with airbrushing magazines.
Bunny With A Keyboard
May 26, 2024 at 5:27 pm
I have far more respect for the musicians who went out with a whimper than I do for Kurt Cobain who went out with a bang.
Bunny With A Keyboard
May 20, 2024 at 12:08 pm
Amy Winehouse will be best remembered for two things:
1.) Singing a song with the lyrics, “They tried to make me go to rehab, but I said, ‘No, no, no.’”
2.) Dying of alcohol poisoning.
Ktuff_morning
August 7, 2024 at 11:27 am
3) the video clip where she takes a bump onstage.
Bunny With A Keyboard
May 20, 2024 at 12:15 pm
Men get messages like “Be all that you can be” or “become your best self.”
Women get messages like “Just be yourself” and “you’re perfect just the way you are.”
This used to be that women were just seen as mothers and didn’t really matter beyond that, but for all the claims of uplifting women and all, how much do we see of trying to get women to better themselves like we expect of men?
Instead, it’s a constant “men need to change because we’re already perfect” and it seems to be getting worse.
Nobody’s born perfect.