Better Man
Better Man

Better Man (2024)

7.7 ? Dec 06, 2024 2h 15m

Overview

Follow Robbie Williams' journey from childhood, to being the youngest member of chart-topping boyband Take That, through to his unparalleled achievements as a record-breaking solo artist – all the while confronting the challenges that stratospheric fame and success can bring.

Genres

Music Drama

Release Date

December 06, 2024

Rating

7.7 /10

Runtime

2h 15m

Official Trailer from YouTube

Robbie Williams

Robbie Williams

Robbie Williams (voice)

Jonno Davies

Jonno Davies

Robbie Williams

Steve Pemberton

Steve Pemberton

Peter

Alison Steadman

Alison Steadman

Betty

Kate Mulvany

Kate Mulvany

Janet

Frazer Hadfield

Frazer Hadfield

Nate

Damon Herriman

Damon Herriman

Nigel Martin-Smith

Raechelle Banno

Raechelle Banno

Nicole Appleton

Tom Budge

Tom Budge

Guy Chambers

Jake Simmance

Jake Simmance

Gary Barlow

Liam Head

Liam Head

Howard Donald

Chase Vollenweider

Chase Vollenweider

Jason Orange

Jesse Hyde

Jesse Hyde

Mark Owen

Anthony Hayes

Anthony Hayes

Chris Briggs

John Waters

John Waters

Michael Parkinson

Leo Harvey-Elledge

Leo Harvey-Elledge

Liam Gallagher

Chris Gun

Noel Gallagher

Carter J. Murphy

Carter J. Murphy

Young Robbie

Asmara Feik

Asmara Feik

Young Robbie

Rafferty Gleeson

Young Gary

CinemaSerf avatar

CinemaSerf

7.0/10

Dec 28, 2024

There's something about the use of the monkey to characterise Robbie Williams that makes this quite a visceral watch at times. The film tells the story of the fairly turbulent rise of this "Take That" singer from boyhood exponent of Gilbert and Sullivan to a man on the right end of an £80 millions record deal. His dad (Steve Pemberton) went off to a football match whilst he was a child and never came back, and that left him with his mum "Janet" (Kate Mulvany) and adoring nan (Alison Steadman) living a pretty much hand to mouth existence and leaving him with a pretty solid foundation for his later emotional and trust issues. Unless you've lived on the moon these last twenty years, then you'll know much of what happens next. What does make this stand out a little more is the fact that Williams himself is behind the project and is in no way afraid to portray himself as a complete ass. His drink, drugs, tantrums and generally spoilt brattishness are laid bare with little, if any, attempt to sanitise. In some ways it reminded me of the recent "Amy" biopic and came hot on the heels of a recent viewing of "Easter Parade" (1948) with both serving, for completely different reasons, to augment the thrust of this story of a person who attained great stardom, success and wealth - and ultimately ended up with addictions galore and few, real, friends amidst a sea of hangers-on and parasites all too eager to selfishly cash in on the fame of a lad who started aged just fifteen. Of course it's not exactly balanced, and I'm sure the gospel according to Robbie might not be quite how others see their own behaviour (or his) but there is an honesty to this that brings home just how ruthless the music business is and at just how fickle fame can be when those we idolise lose their lustre. It doesn't do it any harm that many of his solo songs work well through big screen audio with some classy string arrangements and powerful vocals to remind us that, unlike many of the largely forgotten "Take That" singles, his music - especially the stuff he made with Guy Chambers - is the stuff we will really long remember. It's not for the faint hearted, but still well worth a watch.

Read full review

Comments

Please login to post comments

FWAnime

Premium Anime Streaming

Watch thousands of anime episodes with premium quality and no ads!

Visit Now
s