52 Films by Women Vol 7. 45. GREATEST DAYS (Director: Coky Giedroyć)
Jukebox musicals can be extremely lucrative. The hits of a
popular artist are employed in the service of a flimsy plot. Audiences don’t
ask, ‘what happens next’, rather ‘how will it feature my favourite song?’ One
of the most financially successful jukebox musicals of the latest twenty years
is Mamma Mia!, directed on stage and screen by Phyllida Lloyd and
utilising the songbook of the Swedish pop quartet, Abba. The film brought
together Meryl Streep, Christine Baranski and Julie Walters - the triple act we
never knew we wanted. Not quite as successful – and not yet turned into a film
- is We Will Rock You, featuring the songs of Queen. Greatest
Days, written by Tim Firth and directed by Coky Giedroyć, utilises songs made famous by
the band Take That – Gary Barlow, Mark Owen, Jason Orange and Howard Donald. It
is based on Firth’s play, ‘The Band’, first staged in 2017 about a group of
female pop fans who are spuriously reunited twenty-five years later. In the
film, Radio Clitheroe, a local radio station that you can apparently receive in
London, plays a part. The gimmick of the play is that the stage singers
performing Take That songs were selected through a television show, Let
It Shine. In the film, it is nine actresses who are showcased, led by
the likeable Aisling Bea as children’s nurse, Rachel O’Flynn. Bea is also
credited as script editor which I think means she contributed some ward bants,
whilst her character brings the radio to hospital – not to everyone’s delight.
Having won a radio phone-in competition, Rachel is offered
the opportunity to take three of her friends to Athens to see a reunion gig
featuring ‘the boys’ (Take That or any of its members are never mentioned by
name). Cue flashbacks to Rachel as a teenager in 1993 (Lara McDonald), hoping
to catch her favourite band on the British chart show ‘Top of the Pops’ before
her permanently angry father (Barry O’Connor) confiscates her television set.
‘It’s not important,’ he barks. ‘It is to me,’ young Rachel replies. This is
the sort of musical in which music is represented as a comfort blanket – fully
dressed band members appear under Rachel’s bedsheet and sing to her. (That’s
all they do – promise.) When she is in the kitchen preparing spaghetti hoops on
toast for her young brother – they had young brothers, I mean spaghetti hoops,
in 1993 – the band appear from inside cupboards and shelves in a musical number
handing her a plate and buttering her toast. Angry dad naturally smashes a
plate. ‘No matter how much mum and dad don’t love each other, they’ll always
love us,’ Rachel assures her sibling, none too convincingly, as the young boy
prods at his spaghetti hoops. Maybe, but will he eat better?
Young Rachel’s friends include Debbie (Jessie Mae Alonzo),
who tapes ‘Top of the Pops’ for her bestie. ‘How did you do that?’ asks one of
the girls incredulously, as if we didn’t have VHS machines in 1993? I think
Firth is projecting back to when he was a teenager. Claire (Carragon Guest) is
a promising competitive diver, supported by the truanting group bearing a
poster, ‘For f-s sake, just jump’. Clearly none of the girls are cut out to
work for the Samaritans. Heather (Eliza Dobson) ‘vogues’, framing her face
between her hands, because voguing is a thing. Zoe (Nandi Sawyers Hudson) is a
Head Girl destined to go to university, so long as her friends don’t keep
pulling her away from her schoolbooks.
Much of the early part of the film is spent with the younger
girls, when the adult Rachel is not fending off propositions from her live-in
boyfriend, Jeff (Marc Wootton). Wootton is tarnished by his role as man-child
Mr Poppy in the Nativity films – I think Rachel took one look at
those movies and thought, ‘I’m not marrying him’. After hearing that Rachel has
won tickets to go to Athens, he’s all for inviting another couple and missing
the concert altogether. (He’s not one for ‘the boys.’) Rachel knows who she
wants to invite but cannot bear to call them. She asks the radio station, ‘can
you do it instead?’
Firth’s gags don’t exactly hit the mark. There is a line
about a rescue dog stuck in its basket and you think, ‘of course it’s stuck –
the dog is traumatised’. Rachel would rather buy a caravan than plan a wedding.
Why not? A caravan has facilities. When we see Rachel looking down at a waste
disposal unit – one of the rare examples of expressive camera placement – we
long for it to be switched on, taking pages of the script with it. It takes a
long time for friends to be reunited.
In so much as the film has drama involving two or more
consecutive scenes, this involves a trip in 1993 to see ‘the boys’ in
Manchester. Debbie obtains tickets for the five of them as her sixteenth
birthday present. In a scene loaded with meaning, each girl puts on a wristband
and makes a pledge, one wristband touching another touching another, to keep in
touch. It is a pledge they will break.
(Not a spoiler.) They are mesmerised by the gig but skip out before the encore
hoping to catch the band as they leave the venue. ‘They’ve already left and are
on that coach,’ they are told, says backstage security pointing to a departing
vehicle. ‘We’ve missed the last train home,’ exclaims one of the girls.
Despondency is broken when one of them stands in front of a 43 bus. ‘You’ve
missed the last train and you can’t get home,’ says the driver, allowing them
on, explaining – and we think it is a joke – that he used to be in Spandau
Ballet. The girls start dancing on the bus as do a group of boys and the aisle
widens to give them space to move. The driver himself appears in a red dress.
It is lively staging, but the song isn’t memorable. Eventually, they are
ejected from the vehicle. The girls walk up a hill. Debbie then accompanies
Rachel part of the way home but we immediately sense something is very wrong.
Giedroyć does foreboding
rather well, not to mention Ceefax, the happily defunct BBC digital news service,
which has the 1993 headline, ‘Britain is doing well in the EU’. That message is
a bit late for modern audiences. In case, who remembers a Ceefax headline?
Having waited to see the friends as adults, it is
disappointing to spend very little screen time with them. Alice Lowe plays
fashion designer, Heather who speaks both Italian and Greek – ‘I speak Italian
for commerce and Greek for love,’ she remarks, well aware which country has the
stronger economy. Amaka Okafor plays Zoe, forever spelling her surname as ‘two
oh’s, one ‘e’’ as if it were a wolf whistle. She never became a professor but
has four children instead. Jayde Adams models cat t-shirts as singleton Claire.
She has the best line. ‘I had plenty of one-night stands. I slept with men,
then ate them.’ Her diving career was ended by ‘Doritos and Monster Munch’ – I
don’t recall Doritos being a popular fried potato snack in the 1990s. As Claire
explains, the branded crisps were the friends who told her it was okay not to
jump.
After hiring some motorised scooters, the friends decide to
get their feet wet in a fountain – the statues come to life and start singing.
This gets the women arrested – paddling in public rather claiming that the
statues could hold a tune. As the clock registers half-past seven, Rachel is
finally released from police questioning.
Did I say that one of the song and dance numbers resembles
an Easyjet commercial? The film gives the misleading impression that passengers
are encouraged to drink alcohol before boarding, that employees tap on the
tarmac and the four women dance on the plane’s wing. Utter nonsense. You have
to pay for everything on an Easyjet flight. Early on, there is an homage to a
seminal Jacques Demy musical, though the apostrophe somewhat spoils the shop
front: ‘Umbrella’s of Clitheroe’. Points are awarded for effort; deducted for
application.
Do the women make it to the concert in time? That would be
telling. Home truths are exchanged in an amphitheatre, because why not? When in
Greece, eh? There is a coda that results in dancing in the streets, because
otherwise the film would be a real downer. The bearded bus driver in a red
dress even reappears.
The best song in the film – as in the play – is ‘Back for
Good’, sung by each character to their teenage self. Not only because the song
is ubiquitous – apparently covered by 89 artists - but because each character
reconnects and learns to respect the aspirations each held as teenagers. Not
the bit where Rachel has one of ‘the boys’ children, but you wonder whether she
is holding out for a Barlow. The song is performed at a poignant moment in the
drama and for a brief moment the film comes to life. For me, there is a
wallpaper blandness to the music, as if it were designed not to intrude on your
deepest thoughts.
Greatest Days has so far achieved a modest
success at the UK box office, earning £536,955 in its first four days of
release (16-19 June 2023). It has moments of edginess, Heather explaining that
she is a lesbian. ‘Did you know back then?’ she asked. ‘Who knew anything
then?’ Heather replies, a remark that could be considered a commentary on the
appropriateness of gender reassignment surgery for teenagers. Would they know
what their sexuality was at that age? The film suggests that Rachel’s aversion
to marriage is related to her upbringing. The ending suggests that trends can
be bucked. The drama also reflects on Rachel’s guilt. If she hadn’t insisted on
being walked home. This does not account for the driver’s part in Debbie’s
accident.
What the film really lacks are star-making moments when the
characters on screen truly own a song and give it depth and meaning. The best
musicals are exhilarating. Giedroyć
fills the frame with business but very little surprise. She shows young Rachel
sweeping up the broken plate but doesn’t illuminate the failure of Rachel’s
parents’ marriage. Neither does Giedroyć
use a musical sequence to illustrate the dynamic between two or more
characters. Songs can give characters a power than their non-singing selves
don’t possess. Giedroyć puts
plenty of coins in the jukebox but cannot make us dance.
Reviewed at Vue Westwood Cross, near Margate, Southern England, Screen Two, Saturday 24 June 2023, 13:35 screening.
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