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IMDbPro

Killing Bono

  • 2011
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 54m
IMDb RATING
6.3/10
6.8K
YOUR RATING
Killing Bono (2011)
In Dublin, two brothers work to become rock stars, but they look on as old school friends U2 become the biggest band in the world.
Play trailer2:03
8 Videos
16 Photos
ComedyMusic

Two brothers attempt to become global rock stars but can only look on as old school friends U2 become the biggest band in the world.Two brothers attempt to become global rock stars but can only look on as old school friends U2 become the biggest band in the world.Two brothers attempt to become global rock stars but can only look on as old school friends U2 become the biggest band in the world.

  • Director
    • Nick Hamm
  • Writers
    • Dick Clement
    • Ian La Frenais
    • Simon Maxwell
  • Stars
    • Ben Barnes
    • Robert Sheehan
    • Krysten Ritter
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.3/10
    6.8K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Nick Hamm
    • Writers
      • Dick Clement
      • Ian La Frenais
      • Simon Maxwell
    • Stars
      • Ben Barnes
      • Robert Sheehan
      • Krysten Ritter
    • 27User reviews
    • 62Critic reviews
    • 46Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos8

    U.S. Version
    Trailer 2:03
    U.S. Version
    Killing Bono: International Trailer
    Trailer 1:55
    Killing Bono: International Trailer
    Killing Bono: International Trailer
    Trailer 1:55
    Killing Bono: International Trailer
    Killing Bono: You Too
    Clip 1:22
    Killing Bono: You Too
    Killing Bono: Band Sign-Up
    Clip 0:49
    Killing Bono: Band Sign-Up
    Killing Bono: Behind The Scenes 1
    Featurette 5:56
    Killing Bono: Behind The Scenes 1
    Killing Bono: Behind The Scenes 3
    Featurette 5:59
    Killing Bono: Behind The Scenes 3

    Photos16

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    Top cast44

    Edit
    Ben Barnes
    Ben Barnes
    • Neil McCormick
    Robert Sheehan
    Robert Sheehan
    • Ivan McCormick
    Krysten Ritter
    Krysten Ritter
    • Gloria
    Ralph Brown
    Ralph Brown
    • Leo
    Jason Byrne
    • Hotel Receptionist
    Sam Corry
    • Paul McGuinness
    Seán Doyle
    Seán Doyle
    • Larry Mullen Jr.
    Seán Duggan
    Seán Duggan
    • Liam
    • (as Sean Duggan)
    David Fennelly
    • Frankie
    Mark Griffin
    • The Edge
    Aoife Holton
    • Stella McCormick
    Joni Kamen
    Joni Kamen
    • Joss
    Thomas Kelly
    • Hopeless Eric
    Packy Lee
    Packy Lee
    • U2 Security Guard
    James Lonergan
    • Keith
    Lisa McAllister
    • Erika
    Aidan McArdle
    Aidan McArdle
    • Bill McCormick
    Martin McCann
    Martin McCann
    • Bono
    • Director
      • Nick Hamm
    • Writers
      • Dick Clement
      • Ian La Frenais
      • Simon Maxwell
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews27

    6.36.8K
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    Featured reviews

    8Agirlonline

    An enjoyable surprise

    I really enjoyed this movie. I have to admit, I initially had NO interest in the story, and only set out to see it to check out Ben Barnes' latest project. But within 10 minutes I forgot about watching "the lovely Mr. Barnes" (which he is not, in this movie) and was genuinely captivated by and became engaged in the story, the characters and the humor. I'd seen clips and responded with a yawn; thought the comedy portrayed in them was obvious and heavy-handed. But the trailer doesn't do it justice. The laughs were real and unexpected and the dialogue quick, natural and enjoyable. All of the supporting characters were excellent. Robert Sheehan, whom I'd never seen in anything prior, did a good job and Barnes disappears into and owns his character. All in all a fun watch, I'd recommend it.
    7PipAndSqueak

    A close shave with fame

    To truly appreciate this film you'll either have to be 40 something plus or be heavily involved in your own peer group's music scene. The League of Gentleman have a failed musician character that they play for the pathos type of comedy. Here, a real 'failed' musician finds comedy in rewriting his own aborted attempt at snatching fame and fortune in the fickle music industry. It's a very affectionate account - skating gently over the less pleasant aspects of the industry. Robert Sheehan is a dream as Ivan - oooh yes you could really see him in the U2 line up - something brother Neil prevented from happening. I honestly was transported back to the 1980's and dodgy music venues and half baked bands performing as if their lives depended on it. Fabulous. Not everyone's cup of tea though. Pure nostalgia for me - but oh I do wish they'd managed to sneak in a bit more of actual U2 music.
    6intern-88

    Killing Bono: on the wrong side of history

    A few years ago there was an achingly trendy 'electro rock' band called Bono Must Die. It was sued out of existence by Bono himself who clearly didn't like the idea of young, hip people swinging their pants to tunes built on Bono-hatred. Now there's a new film out called Killing Bono, yet far from troubling the normally so sensitive singer, it has received his backing. It isn't hard to see why. It's like a creation myth for U2, depicting Bono as a long-suffering saint and his band as a punkish, rebel outfit rather than the Po-faced promoters of 'world music' they really were.

    The film is based on rock critic Neil McCormick's book, I Was Bono's Doppelgänger. It tells the true-ish story of Dublin-born Neil and his brother Ivan trying to make it in pop and/or rock while continually being overshadowed by their former schoolfriends Paul Hewson and Dave Evans – otherwise known as Bono and The Edge, whose band The Hype later becomes U2 and conquers the world, while Neil and Ivan scrape by in a dingy flat in London where their numerous record company rejection letters are pinned to the wall in the shape of the word 'WANKERS'.

    The trouble is that in turning U2 into the barometer by which he measures and gets miserable about his own rubbishness, McCormick's book and now celluloid life story make Bono a saintly, inscrutably good, otherworldly figure. Bono (Martin McCann) floats through the movie in a Christ-like fashion, always impeccably turned out, voice calm, never saying words like 'bollox' or 'shite' as his schoolmates and the McCormicks do. He does, however, eat chips at one point, which is a kind of shocking image.

    It is entirely feasible, of course, that Bono really was like this: aloof, pure, pompous. That would not come as a surprise to anyone who has seen footage of Bono performing in the Eighties, with his big hair, high heels, and breathy, strangely American-accented mini-speeches about uprisings in Soweto (good) or uprisings in Northern Ireland (bad). Yet in investing Bono with an ethereal quality, in making him the yin to McCormick's yang, the movie comes across less like a rock biopic than as a conservative morality tale stuffed with righteous seers and wayward scallywags. Bono effectively saves the McCormick brothers, with a speech in the back of a limousine about brotherly love, in a not dissimilar fashion to the way Christ rescued James and John from a life of fishery.

    The mythologising extends to the way U2's music is presented. They're depicted as the heirs to punk, bashing out Iggy Pop songs in a garage before going on to conquer and colonise a bland pop landscape with heartfelt music. In truth, far from being the punks of the Eighties, U2 were the equivalent of those Seventies Po-faced prog rock bands that punk eventually swept aside. U2's own comeuppance came towards the end of the Eighties when, after a decade of thrilling ageing rock critics and Americans but boring the rest of us rigid with their sweeping and serious guitar songs, they were elbowed aside by the rebirth of pop hedonism: rave, acid, baggy, whose adherents didn't go to gigs to learn about Nelson Mandela but to get smashed.

    U2's out-of-touchness was brilliantly illustrated by their release in 1988 of the film and album Rattle and Hum, their most worthy dose of blackish, bluesy, Elvisy Americana to date, at a time when the kidz were knocking back Es and dancing like mental patients. 'Bombastic and misguided', said one critic of Rattle and Hum. 'Pretentious', said the rest. And of course U2 only made things worse when they tried to recover by releasing the electronic dance-inspired Achtung, Baby! in 1991. It was as if Jethro Tull had tried to play 'Pretty Vacant'. Just as the punks cheered upon hearing of the death of the fat, bloated Elvis in 1977, so some young 'electro rockers' today wish for the death of Bono.

    It really is only a handful of serious rock critics who still treat U2 seriously, fantasising that they are 'real' where most others are fake. As a result, Killing Bono, the life and times of a rock critic in the making, ends up being deeply conservative. Part On The Buses, part Rattle and Hum, it combines slapstick humour with Bono sanctification to tell a pretty warped story about both U2 and the Eighties.
    8rooprect

    I read the negative reviews & tried to hate it, but I couldn't

    I can see how some people may get annoyed at the protagonist of this story. "Killing Bono" is the story of a chronic loser, and from the outset, he makes every bad choice possible, repeats his bad choices, blows just about every golden opportunity to redeem himself. And all the while he cockily convinces himself that he is the last great idealist on the planet. Who would want to sit through 2 hours of this??

    Answer: YOU.

    Maybe it's Ben Barnes' charming portrayal of the loser (a bit like John Ritter's charming loser character Jack Tripper on "Three's Company"), maybe it's the wonderfully acidic script, maybe it's the parade of lovably bizarre characters, or maybe it's the suspense of wanting to know if he actually does kill Bono, as the title & opening flash-forward scene tease us. Whatever it is, something about this film will keep you interested & entertained until the very second the end credits roll.

    Loosely, very loosely based on the memoirs of Bono's 70s school chum and rival rockstar Neil McCormick, this film depicts some true events such as the anemic rise of Neil's 80s pop band "Shook Up!" (they weren't half bad, check out their videos on youtube) and some not-so-true events that really spice things up in the third act. But since this is a comedy, the fictionalizations are strangely believable if not central to the point of the movie.

    "This is not a true story. It is crucial to say that," says director Nick Hamm in the DVD bonus featurette. "You can be real to the story you're telling, but your story doesn't have to be real."

    The real Neil McCormick, when asked about the fictional aspects, sheepishly approved: "We all fictionalise ourselves ... I created a version of myself to suit my book ... Now, someone has created an alternative version. As a deluded, fame-obsessed young man, of course, I never doubted that one day someone would make a film of my life. It just never occurred to me it would be a comedy."

    That it is. A brilliant & entertaining comedy with a compelling theme driving it. Not many comedies have been able to portray the story of a loser in a fun, vibrant way. But if you're familiar with the obscure gems "Buffalo 66", the documentary "Anvil! The Story of Anvil" or the Aussie rocker "Garage Days", you'll have an idea of the treat you have in store here.

    A final note about the music: I think it features only one U2 song ("Still Haven't Found What I'm Looking For"), but there are some atmospheric bits that sound hauntingly like U2. There's one song by Neil's band Shook Up! entitled "Stop the World", and most of the other songs seem to be new compositions (or new versions) that actually feature Ben Barnes singing. U2 fans may be disappointed because this is not a movie about U2, although it revolves closely around them. In that respect it's a lot like another great comedy "Grand Theft Parsons" about famed singer Gram Parsons' good friend who decides to steal Gram's body after his death.

    "Killing Bono" is a creatively-told fiction that flirts with truth but ultimately takes us in the opposite direction. Hey, this formula worked in "Amadeus" (Mozart), "Immortal Beloved" (Beethoven) and "Impromptu" (Chopin). Sure, why not Bono?
    6elbes

    "Ok Tiger, Let's get you socially lubricated"

    I really wanted to like this film, I really did, but in reality it was simply mediocre. However, it is worth saying that I went into this film not knowing anything about it, and most of the criticisms I formed whilst watching it were made before I found-out that the whole thing was actually based on a true story , which somehow absolves the film of a lot of its sins: The plot was long and meandering, yet bore an uncanny resemblance to the film "Rock Star" (Mark Wahlberg at his finest...?). The acting was questionable bar a great performance from Pete Postlethwaite as the lovable gay landlord. It really bothered me that the band's music (the McCormick Brothers +Shook-up) was actually really good up until their point of stardom when suddenly their musical style was transformed into something that sounded about as 80s as Fall Out Boy... I don't know how much of the soundtrack were original songs written by the band, but I'd be shocked if I found out that the song "Where we want to be" (for example) was an eighties classic. However, there are some criticisms that cannot be excused by the story's supposed authenticity and origins in fact... For example, the film didn't seem to know what it was, too funny to be taken seriously, too dramatic to be a comedy. Therefore many of the jokes were wasted. Despite my aspersions, it has to be said that the casting for the character of "Bono" was impeccable and that added dramatically to the quality of the film- grounding it in reality. Overall, I would say - Questionable acting - Brilliant Casting - A bit on the long side

    Storyline

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    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The real brothers Ivan and Neil McCormick made a cameo in this movie. They are the folks watching one of the first gigs in an empty bar.
    • Goofs
      At the bands first practice (in 1976) Ivan McCormick suggests playing a song by Dire Straits. Dire Straits recorded their first album in 1978, so none of them would have known any songs by Dire Straits, let alone have even heard of them.
    • Quotes

      Ivan McCormick: You made the worst decision of my life!

    • Connections
      Featured in Ebert Presents: At the Movies: Episode #2.16 (2011)
    • Soundtracks
      Gimme Some Skin
      Written by Iggy Pop & James Williamson

      Performed by 'The Hype' sung by Martin McCann

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    FAQ15

    • How long is Killing Bono?Powered by Alexa

    Details

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    • Release date
      • August 3, 2011 (France)
    • Countries of origin
      • United Kingdom
      • Ireland
    • Official site
      • Official Blog
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Hạ Gục Bono
    • Filming locations
      • Belfast, County Antrim, Northern Ireland, UK
    • Production companies
      • Cinema Three
      • Generator Entertainment
      • Greenroom Entertainment
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Gross worldwide
      • $717,798
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 54m(114 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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