Agrega una trama en tu idiomaAging rock group use a young fresh faced punk band to front new recordings to fool the music industry.Aging rock group use a young fresh faced punk band to front new recordings to fool the music industry.Aging rock group use a young fresh faced punk band to front new recordings to fool the music industry.
- Premios
- 3 premios ganados en total
Gareth Jones
- Radio DJ
- (voz)
Liam Manfredonia
- Will - Bass player
- (as Will Peters)
- Dirección
- Guionistas
- Todo el elenco y el equipo
- Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro
Opiniones destacadas
This is a low budget British film with ageing actors still showing that they can rock it.
It is inspired by true events from 2004, when Mike Peters of the Welsh rock group The Alarm released a single under the pseudonym of a teenage band called The Poppy Fields.
Peters plays a cameo in this film and The Alarm provide songs for the film.
Phil Daniels and Keith Allen are fellow band members who reunite after a funeral of a fellow rock star. The band fell out 20 years earlier in acrimonious circumstances. They start jamming while drunk and discover they still produce good music.
They look to get a record deal but get knocked back for being yesterday's men. The record executives want young bands with attitude and a teenage fan base.
Daniels gets the idea of getting some youngsters to form a band and mime their songs and hit the charts.
However Allen distrusts him and is an obstacle to this scheme. One of the teenage band member is a talented musician and might have history with Daniels.
Also it seems no one had a good look at the record contract the fake band signed.
The film starts of brightly, Daniels still has a lot of oomph in him. The latter part of the film loses its momentum when it goes for some melodrama. The film is short enough to have a feel good factor and great acting from the veterans.
It is inspired by true events from 2004, when Mike Peters of the Welsh rock group The Alarm released a single under the pseudonym of a teenage band called The Poppy Fields.
Peters plays a cameo in this film and The Alarm provide songs for the film.
Phil Daniels and Keith Allen are fellow band members who reunite after a funeral of a fellow rock star. The band fell out 20 years earlier in acrimonious circumstances. They start jamming while drunk and discover they still produce good music.
They look to get a record deal but get knocked back for being yesterday's men. The record executives want young bands with attitude and a teenage fan base.
Daniels gets the idea of getting some youngsters to form a band and mime their songs and hit the charts.
However Allen distrusts him and is an obstacle to this scheme. One of the teenage band member is a talented musician and might have history with Daniels.
Also it seems no one had a good look at the record contract the fake band signed.
The film starts of brightly, Daniels still has a lot of oomph in him. The latter part of the film loses its momentum when it goes for some melodrama. The film is short enough to have a feel good factor and great acting from the veterans.
Vinyl is just a fun movie. The movie is fantastic and you can tell it was a labor of love to get this film made. No, it's not going to win an Academy Award (well, maybe for the soundtrack), but what's wrong with 90 minutes of good entertainment and a story that will have you leaving the theater with a smile on your face? I was fortunate enough to attend the American premiere in New York City. Back then, distribution was seen as a major issue. It's good to see the film is getting on some screens in the UK. I'd certainly like to go see it again and hope it can get on some screens here in the States. I was lucky enough to talk to director Sara Sugarman and -- unlike what the twit at the bottom of the screen said -- found her to be utterly charming. You could see the dedication and sacrifice she put in to get this film made.
Go see this movie!
Go see this movie!
Plenty of laughs in this file which is loosely based on a true story (and full of in-jokes for those in the know). It could easily have fallen into the trap of being predictable but it doesn't. It comes over as fresh, quirky and fun. The serious moments are very natural, not forced, the music is good and the young band are very easy on the eye for the younger viewers. For the rest of us, there's Phil Daniels as the ever-optimistic Johnny Jones and Keith Allen, looking typically curmudgeonly as Minto, plus some well-aimed swipes at the contemporary record industry. Very much in the tradition of Very Annie Mary or The Full Monty.
Vinyl- Director Sara Sugarman/ Written Jim Cooper, Sara Sugarman
3/5
By Jonathan L Hermitt
Independent films are somewhat risky where they can either be a cinema gem or confusingly banal.
I took the plunge with an indie comedy and discovered that my precious time hadn't completely been drained, staring into my laptop screen.
In a peculiar genre emerges a small, low budgeted British off-comedy, Vinyl, lead by veteran actors such as Keith Allen (Minto) and Phil Daniels (Johnny Jones) and fresh, upcoming pretty boy Jamie Blackley (Drainpipe). Filmed in land of the Welsh, tells the true story of a 1980s band that ignites a media phenomenon by casting a group of young children to masquerade the hit single of the ageing eighties band. Raising awareness upon the issue of image, capitalising obsessed music labels and the ignorance of consumerism; projecting an almost satire objective.
A cheeky little tale that manages to maintain one's attention throughout; alongside relevant subplots that plays large contributions to the main plot. Occasionally forced the odd chuckle and included spots of crude humour (the best kind) to give it that British edge. A deeper character development wouldn't have hurt the film, although there wasn't much complexity in the characters unless we dug...dug deep.
The acting performances overall were mediocre, however Phil Daniels and Jamie Blackley did stand out from the rest of the group- this could be due to being scripted more speech, but the penultimate scene when both had to dig deep and find those tears was rather indicative of skill. The presence of tears weren't the indication but more the timing and control of the quantity were reflective of the characters and the respected reputation of Phil Daniels and potential of Blackley.
Could it better? Of course.
Regardless, sometimes that is the sacrifice of a low-budget film- needless to say, the film hasn't won the rights to boast although I wouldn't discard it completely.
3/5
By Jonathan L Hermitt
Independent films are somewhat risky where they can either be a cinema gem or confusingly banal.
I took the plunge with an indie comedy and discovered that my precious time hadn't completely been drained, staring into my laptop screen.
In a peculiar genre emerges a small, low budgeted British off-comedy, Vinyl, lead by veteran actors such as Keith Allen (Minto) and Phil Daniels (Johnny Jones) and fresh, upcoming pretty boy Jamie Blackley (Drainpipe). Filmed in land of the Welsh, tells the true story of a 1980s band that ignites a media phenomenon by casting a group of young children to masquerade the hit single of the ageing eighties band. Raising awareness upon the issue of image, capitalising obsessed music labels and the ignorance of consumerism; projecting an almost satire objective.
A cheeky little tale that manages to maintain one's attention throughout; alongside relevant subplots that plays large contributions to the main plot. Occasionally forced the odd chuckle and included spots of crude humour (the best kind) to give it that British edge. A deeper character development wouldn't have hurt the film, although there wasn't much complexity in the characters unless we dug...dug deep.
The acting performances overall were mediocre, however Phil Daniels and Jamie Blackley did stand out from the rest of the group- this could be due to being scripted more speech, but the penultimate scene when both had to dig deep and find those tears was rather indicative of skill. The presence of tears weren't the indication but more the timing and control of the quantity were reflective of the characters and the respected reputation of Phil Daniels and potential of Blackley.
Could it better? Of course.
Regardless, sometimes that is the sacrifice of a low-budget film- needless to say, the film hasn't won the rights to boast although I wouldn't discard it completely.
Wow, it was great to catch up with Phil Daniels after all these years! Living in the USA, I literally hadn't seen him in anything since I ventured into a Mpls. theater in late '79 for my initial viewing of "Quadrophenia". Oh, I'd heard him 'rapping' on Blur's "Parklife" and as the lead voice in "Chicken Run", but it was my first actual Phil sighting since the 70's! And I've got to say, he can still bring it as a lead actor. We're roughly the same age, so please keep it going, Phil. It's nice to see there's still hope for the over 55 crowd when you're getting plum roles, even if I'm still sitting here at this god-awful desk.
As for the movie, I'm going with a six rating. I was unfamiliar with Mike Peters' 2004 hoax where he released a song under a pseudonym, but I'm glad he was able to pull one over on the music industry which ultimately led to this film. And I always liked The Alarm, even if they were slagged off as short-lived "U2 wannabes" in the states.
As for the movie, I'm going with a six rating. I was unfamiliar with Mike Peters' 2004 hoax where he released a song under a pseudonym, but I'm glad he was able to pull one over on the music industry which ultimately led to this film. And I always liked The Alarm, even if they were slagged off as short-lived "U2 wannabes" in the states.
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaAlexa Davies's debut.
- Bandas sonorasFree Rock 'N Roll
(Vinyl Version)
Music by Mike Peters
Lyrics by Mike Peters & Phil Daniels
Recording under license from Twenty First Century Recording Company ©2011
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Detalles
- Fecha de lanzamiento
- Países de origen
- Sitio oficial
- También se conoce como
- Винил
- Locaciones de filmación
- Productoras
- Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro
- Tiempo de ejecución
- 1h 25min(85 min)
- Color
- Relación de aspecto
- 1.85 : 1
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