IMDb RATING
5.6/10
1.1K
YOUR RATING
Svengali chronicles a wide-eyed Welshman's haphazard attempts to manage an unruly rock band up the ladder of success whilst keeping his love life firmly on track. Can he manage it?Svengali chronicles a wide-eyed Welshman's haphazard attempts to manage an unruly rock band up the ladder of success whilst keeping his love life firmly on track. Can he manage it?Svengali chronicles a wide-eyed Welshman's haphazard attempts to manage an unruly rock band up the ladder of success whilst keeping his love life firmly on track. Can he manage it?
- Awards
- 1 nomination total
Jermaine Liburd
- Marcus
- (as Vauxhall Jermaine)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
Great cast. That was all that was good about it. Thought it was going to be a feel good film, but it had a poor slow storyline, not funny, not gritty just a slow boring film that didn't even have a feel good ending!! Why did I waste my time
Maybe I was mesmerised by 'the accents', but It's a Comedy Movie which I enjoyed watching. However, the ending was a bit flat.
I bought a package of random films, and Svengali was in it. Having read the cast list I was instantly invested, with such performers as Martin Freeman and Matt Berry I couldn't wait to start watching.
And then the film started.
And I couldn't wait to stop watching. One of the most unwatchable films I've ever seen, and I watch a lot of bad movies. Jonny Owen as Dixie was utterly unlikable to me, and his performance was less enjoyable than nails on a chalk board.
I say avoid this film at all costs.
And then the film started.
And I couldn't wait to stop watching. One of the most unwatchable films I've ever seen, and I watch a lot of bad movies. Jonny Owen as Dixie was utterly unlikable to me, and his performance was less enjoyable than nails on a chalk board.
I say avoid this film at all costs.
SVENGALI tales a straightforward tale of a would-be band manager Dixie (Jonny Owen) traveling up from his home in the Welsh valleys to manage a band. The band achieved a certain notoriety (pace the Sex Pistols) and secure a BBC recording session as well as numerous offers of recording contracts. Dixie tries his best to keep them under control, but finds the strain too much and eventually returns home with his girlfriend Shell (Vicky McClure). This film is very much a one-person show: Owen not only stars in it, but wrote the script and produced it. Director John Hardwick keeps the action going at a brisk pace, and there is some atmospheric cinematography by Catherine Derry, contrasting the lonely Welsh and Scottish rural locations with the urban squalor of central London. The film makes some trenchant points about the difficulties of surviving in the Smoke, especially when Dixie and Shell have to deal with a formidable central European landlady (Katy Brand). There are some memorable cameos by Martin Freeman as a record-shop owner and Maxine Peake as his long-suffering spouse desperately trying to prevent her husband from losing his temper. The story is a familiar one, but Owen turns in a winning central performance as Dixie: after what he experiences in trying to keep the band together, as well as dealing with a series of rapacious characters including loan-shark Teddy (Eddie Webber) and vamp Natasha (Natasha O'Keeffe), it's not surprising that he wants to return to the comparative security of home. In his final film before his untimely death, Brian Hibbard turns in a memorable cameo as Dixie's Dad; the scene where father and son talk to one another on a wind-swept Welsh mountain is particularly affecting.
Nothing worked. The drama didn't work. The humour didn't work. The love story didn't work. Worst of all, some great talent - Vicky Maclure, Martin Freeman, Maxine Peake, Michael Smiley - could do very little with such a poor script and production values. At times it was excruciatingly bad when clearly meant to be funny. At others it was just plain boring. A big disappointment. At least it was mercifully short. 4 out of ten
Did you know
- TriviaThe Don's Records scene is filmed at Out on the Floor Records, Inverness Street, Camden.
- GoofsWhen Dixie is getting on the train to go back to London from Wales, the time can clearly be seen on the electronic board as 11.02am. As the train pulls out, a different board shows a partially obscured time, but one which is clearly just after 10am.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Soccer AM: Episode dated 1 March 2014 (2014)
- How long is Svengali?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Official sites
- Language
- Also known as
- Svengali
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Gross worldwide
- $14,482
- Runtime1 hour 33 minutes
- Color
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