弗兰克

喜剧片英国2014

主演:多姆纳尔·格里森,迈克尔·法斯宾德,玛吉·吉伦哈尔,斯科特·麦克纳里,弗朗索瓦·西维尔,卡拉·阿扎,肖恩·欧布莱恩,莫伊拉·布鲁克,保罗·巴特沃斯,菲尔·金斯顿,比利·特雷纳,克里斯·麦克哈利姆,马克·休伯曼,凯蒂·安妮·米切尔,马修·佩奇,亚历克斯·奈特,泰丝·哈珀,布鲁斯·麦金托什

导演:伦尼·阿伯拉罕森

播放地址

 剧照

弗兰克 剧照 NO.1弗兰克 剧照 NO.2弗兰克 剧照 NO.3弗兰克 剧照 NO.4弗兰克 剧照 NO.5弗兰克 剧照 NO.6弗兰克 剧照 NO.13弗兰克 剧照 NO.14弗兰克 剧照 NO.15弗兰克 剧照 NO.16弗兰克 剧照 NO.17弗兰克 剧照 NO.18弗兰克 剧照 NO.19弗兰克 剧照 NO.20
更新时间:2023-08-31 16:37

详细剧情

  乔恩(多姆纳尔·格利森 Domhnall Gleeson 饰)是一个热爱音乐的年轻人,某天误打误撞加入了一支有点神经质的地下乐队,乐队的主唱兼灵魂人物是弗兰克(迈克尔·法斯宾德 Michael Fassbender 饰)——既是才华横溢的天才、又是终日戴着一个硕大头套的 怪人。乔恩跟着乐队到爱尔兰某个偏僻的小木屋里录制专辑,他们在此过上几近与世隔绝的生活。这一年来,乔恩一直私自将他们的生活以视频的形式发布在社交网络上。终于,乐队的奇特经历引起了某个音乐节主办方的关注,乔恩说服成员们远赴美国参加这个叫西南偏南(SXSW)的音乐节,藉此成名。  本片根据乔恩·强森的回忆录改编。片中的乐队领袖弗兰克以Chris Sievey为原型。Chris Sievey在七八十年代红极一时,他同时是个风趣演员,以喜剧形象“Frank Sidebottom”驰誉。在弗兰克身上还能看到Daniel Johnston、Captain Beefheart等特立独行的音乐人的影子。

 长篇影评

 1 ) HEY FRANK, YOU’RE NOT A FREAK

天才在左疯子在右 而大多数人还是走中间道
在影片开头和结尾,都有类似的场景,喊着”Be careful”骑车的少年,在自己门口擦车的中年男子,手挽手经过的老年夫妇。Jon的家乡或是Frank的家乡,堪萨斯州,布拉夫市,他们分享了类似的童年。Jon一直以为他不及frank是因为frank有悲惨的童年或类似的经历,其实并没有,frank生来就是不同的, he is born to be different。
才华,天赋,热情,善良他都有,他能让素不相识的陌生人通过短暂交流敞开心扉,是,他有这种力量,他也有光洁的容颜,可是他偏要带上头套。他想让世界认可他的音乐,所以站在了Jon的身边,但是在SXSW的音乐节现场,在Jon唱起他的糖水可乐时,Frank终于还是崩溃了,蹦出一句话——“YOUR MUSIC IS SHIT.”
是,Jon is Jon, Frank is Frank.他们想要角色互换,但最后失败了。
——You play C F &G?——yeah?——you’re in. see?这支乐队给予Jon的任务就是这个,keyboard,可以是Don、lucus or Jon,但是主唱FRANK只有一个,he’s the core.
于Jon来说,他是有功利心的,没有音乐的纯粹感和利己的坚持,他要迎合大众做流行感强的音乐,他想要融入队伍,想要在这支乐队中获得地位,他并没有get到这支看似freak的乐队的G点,他搞砸了。
而Frank,他的音乐灵感可以来自自然,来自一切,任何东西都能成歌,地毯上的线头,墙,等等,都可以,但是YouTube上的观众看他和Clara却像是怪胎,他有孩童的天真,clara能懂他,保护他,很赞的乐队呢为什么要靠点击率来证明呢,忠于自己,忠于内心。
好在影片最后,Jon把Frank带到EL madrid,带回乐队,Frank低头拘谨的打招呼,然后逐渐抬头,看着他的朋友,热泪盈眶——I love you all. The chorus. Welcome back, frank.

 2 ) 獻給cult的小情歌

喧鬧、怪誕、可愛、歡樂。光看Frank的預告絕對會誤以為這是一部描寫叛逆創作者的歡鬧喜劇,但面具、頭套、奇裝異服卻是一首唱給自己聽的孤獨情歌。

拙作插圖: http://ww4.sinaimg.cn/mw1024/725f21d5gw1eh4t176gacj20rs0l7jyv.jpg

Frank借用與Bob Dylan傳記電影"I'm Not There"類似的致敬手法,描述一個與Frank Sidebottom這個虛構喜劇人物類似的歌手與他的怪咖樂團,包括不露真面目的主唱、暴力的鍵盤手、心事重重的混音師。透過一個渴望成名卻沒什麼音樂天份的普通年輕人,將這個怪異小樂團拉到社會大眾面前。

前半段電影保持著歡樂驚奇的趣味,多虧於Michael Fassbender的表演,讓這個單看有點creepy的大頭人充滿不可思議的可愛魅力。看他們與世隔絕、如同修行般自在的探索創作音樂的樂趣,看身為普通人的主角努力的想要融入這個團隊,觀眾會忍不住想為他的笨拙加油。但當隱藏在大頭面具中的真相暴露後,觀眾又會為主角的一意孤行感到焦躁。作為一個功能型的主角,Domhnall Gleeson的角色後半段的轉折被寫得略缺乏層次,除了惹人厭以外沒能給這部片帶來什麼作為,算是本片主要的一個缺點。好在電影的整體感是流暢的。中段混音師對Frank的才華羨慕忌妒憾恨的情緒,與後半段主角與社會大眾對Frank的誤解達到了很好的連結,讓喜劇轉悲劇的過程不至於突兀。

描寫cult角色不容於社會的故事,Frank並非第一部,手法算不上特別。但尾聲處呈現出的浪漫憂傷卻讓人印象深刻。我想這很大部份必須歸功於演員。Michael Fassbender很精準的掌握了演員在呈現喜劇與悲劇間相異的表演元素。前半段他把握到喜劇人物常具有的笨拙單純,同時也表現出演員本身俱備的領導魅力。後半段則切換到更為寫實的悲劇肢體語言,光是茫然無措的站著就能讓人鼻酸。

以小眾獨立片的完成度而言Frank可說是超越期待的交出亮眼的成績。它有趣、幽默、反英雄,很好的提供觀眾一次從喜悅、興奮到感傷、反思的旅程,但又不至於過度沉重。如同劇中他們表演的那些歌曲一般悅耳輕巧。

 3 ) 2014.7.3

网太挫好不容易啃完Frank的生肉,来写写。从开头男配的脑内独唱+独白就见识了配乐的强大(里边所有被角色不齿的调调我觉得都挺好听的啊...),并且奠定了全片魔性的风格(并不,是黑色幽默)。

一说片子里两个对立方面,男配是个失败却想成功的人,无时无刻不在找灵感写曲子尽管结果不好,这一点跟Frank他们乐队(SORONPRFBS简称SORO好了)很像很像,这也许是为什么一开始那个键盘手招了男配到gig来。但同时男配和SORO从一开始也不一样,男配需要twitter跟外界交流、牢骚日常,反正就是对自己音乐人的身份十分认同并且因为不成功不出名整天丧气窜天;SORO干脆是纯粹地下,完全不苦于出不出名,gig也是自己不满意就内讧不演了,后来想出专辑大概也是希望做个成品把自己的概念传播出去,甚至为此在森林里呆了一年,所以那对法国男女说男配disgusting,大家根本就不是一个追求嘛。

二说Frank,实际上是Frank把对立两方融合起来了,可以看出来乐队里他跟男配关系最好。其实一开始是键盘手找男配入伙的啊,但键盘后来说过他很想成为Frank*,这是从配角角度对主角人格性格的肯定吧,同时也说明了主角会在配角身上有一定映射。Frank带着大家寻找、制造和录制各种声音(在这想说一下这才是我所认知的音乐的真谛啊!!不只有旋律,还有各种经过奇妙混合的声音加入到歌曲里面,旋律所表达的一切情感才被真正充实——因为旋律本身并不能让人感同身受,而音效带出的质感和情景才真正接地气有灵魂啊。顺便这里推首歌,Muse的Animal一定听到最后),他能轻易把人逗开心,就他身上有的那种积极个性阳光完全不能被头套限制,虽然说肯定是因为自闭之类的原因才会戴头套,但这样一来自闭小伙就直面人生了嘛,带给人的灵感鼓励温暖肯定是他自己也想感受到的所以这种力量其他人远远不及。然后要引出归属感的概念啦,Frank属于SORO,而SORO归于地下——不是那种埋没、隐晦的地下,更多是种自娱自乐和对自己优秀个性风格的保持,同时男配属于大众社会,从Frank的角度来讲男配甚至不属于音乐,加入SORO从一开始的寻找机会发光发热到后来的利用,男配跟SORO群体跟Frank的矛盾越来越突出;其间Frank还想迎矛盾而上,这跟他的自闭和男配的影响都脱不了关系,自闭久了容易被外面的世界吸引从而变得极端想要迎合上去,最后本来说好的big gig失败因为乐队分崩离析,就剩Frank一点点的不甘心(或者说是因为男配的忽悠)追赶着微弱的成功的可能性。男配一心为了成名完全不顾其他成员的劝阻最后伤害到Frank导致他消失,后来Frank头套没了(鲨鲨上线)让人心疼得想抱抱他根本就没想好该怎么如此面对以前熟悉的环境吧,之后哭着给SORO大家唱的I love you all实在感动感动感动(从特别羞怯的没话找话到自然而然大家一起和出调调节奏和效果器来呜呜呜呜呜,而且还有不常见的法鲨眼泪煽气氛我的麻麻...)本来追求这么一致爱好品味这么统一的大家凑在一起就很棒了啊根本不用出名不是吗。总之,头套给了Frank归属感于是他安安心心地生活了十几年并且把自己的天分锻炼的超级棒;森林给了SORO归属感所以他们能够沉着气隐居一整年每天都醉心于创作;音乐对男配而言没有归属感他要的不过是出名,前后twitter界面上follower数量变化的细节也体现了这点。
以上,Frank,大概这样。前边的那个*是想说键盘手曾经说自己想成为Frank,可惜Frank只有一个,后来自杀的时候戴着Frank的头套,大概是“die as Frank”,是从作品内部对角色的肯定也是对Frank自身的另一面的另一种诠释吧,如果他不是这么talented如果他内心并不单纯不积极如果他不快乐那Frank就也不会存在了啊。

三说SORONPRFBS,乐队名字没法念隐喻他们没法成功,这里用周国平的话说就是在精神领域的追求中,不必说世俗的成功,即便是精神追求本身的成功也不是主要的目标,目标即寓于过程之中,对精神价值的追求本身成了生存方式。比较喜欢的是生存方式的概念,把追求作为生活方式不就是SORO他们在木屋里录歌时候的精神支柱吗,出不出名究竟又有什么必要。这样说来好像男配很可恶进来掺和一脚整坏了又走了,但其实他逼得Frank本体示人同时SORO经历这番一定能走上更明白的路至少对自己追求什么一清二楚了。男配在找出走的Frank的时候意外得知网上的点击率大多数其实是在看他们的笑话(妈蛋根本是编剧在自黑自己的逗比设定吧),他意识到自己对Frank和乐队的破坏有多大(重复了好几遍I ruined everything),感觉挺好笑实际挺悲伤的啊,做一些不能被理解的实验音乐(实际超级好听好么)被当成逗比这简直是艺术的悲哀,知我者谓我心忧,不知者谓我何求。其实不被人理解是艺术的悲哀也是幸运,要相信啊开拓者总是少的。片子在对实验音乐的价值进行探讨的同时可能也有着对电影行当的忧虑吧,也许,我瞎说的。

结束的太突兀算了最后来安利!!首先对于脑残粉(就我吧),头套Frank萌得令人发指,裸脸Frank心酸得让人嗷嗷叫不敢直视对方不给正脸什么的呜呜呜(其实主要因为法鲨的颜////////),Frank身材全程高能,腰身还有好看的胳膊和手////////法鲨讲话唱歌什么的根本把持不住!!!!【对于路人来说】,全员逗比的同时带着分量十足的内心戏,BGM全部给42个赞,各种小细节的黑色幽默都妙不可言,色调有种大森林水汪汪凉爽自在的感觉,乐队音乐全部现场演唱录制反正我觉得每首都好听QAQ(包括被除了SORO全员都唾弃的女配的兹兹电音好好好好听),哦不过警告全片无女主(。
片尾放了三首鲨鲨唱的歌,之后还会出专辑,天地良心!!!!

就这样

 4 ) 独一无二

我们都像Jon一样
有点小本事
有点小梦想
以为距离成功只差一个机遇而已
在专业人士的身边
觉得自己只要努个力就能跟他们一样
面对无法企及的天才
就认为只是因为没有跟对方一样的曾经
但一介凡人
有点小本事
还有小梦想
当然不会满足于just happy
当他终于用自己的标准把天才毁入凡间
当他终于明白有些天赋真的是天生而无需历练
当他终于把张牙舞爪的Frank变成了像一直在做错事的小孩
他才真正看清
你从来就跟他们不一样
Jon

 5 ) Frank Sidebottom: the true story of the man behind the mask -- Jon Ronson

随手搜的,先摘过来,有空翻一下。
以下节选自Frank: The True Story that Inspired the Movie该书,书的作者Jon Ronson是剧本的Co-writer,也即电影中Jon的原型。
--------
更新,大概是不会翻译了,其实单词很简单很好理解,而且和电影里的对话非常像呢,可见改编之忠实。

In 1987 I was 20 and the student union entertainments officer for the Polytechnic of Central London. One day I was sitting in the office when the telephone rang. I picked it up.

"So Frank's playing tonight and our keyboard player can't make it and so we're going to have to cancel unless you know any keyboard players," said a frantic voice.

I cleared my throat. "I play keyboards," I said.

"Well you're in!" the man shouted.

"But I don't know any of your songs," I said.

"Wait a minute," the man said.

I heard muffled voices. He came back to the phone. "Can you play C, F and G?" he said.

The man on the phone said I should meet them at the soundcheck at 5pm. He added that his name was Mike, and Frank Sidebottom's real name was Chris. Then he hung up.

When I got to the bar it was empty except for a few men fiddling with equipment.

"Hello?" I called.

The men turned. I scrutinised their faces. In the three hours since the phone call I'd learned a little about Frank Sidebottom – how he wore a big, fake head and there was much speculation about his real identity. Some thought he might be the alter ego of a celebrity, possibly Midge Ure, the lead singer of Ultravox, who was known to be a big Frank Sidebottom fan. Which of these men might be Frank? If I looked closely would there be some kind of facial clue?

Then I became aware of another figure kneeling in the shadows, his back to me. He began to turn. I let out a gasp. Two huge eyes were staring at me, painted onto a great, imposing fake head, lips slightly parted as if mildly surprised. Why was he wearing the head when there was nobody there to see it except for his own band? Did he never take it off?

"Hello, Chris," I said. "I'm Jon."

Silence.

"Hello ... Chris?"

Nothing.

"Hello ... Frank?" I tried.

"HELLO!" he yelled.

Another of the men came bounding over to me. "You're Jon," he said. "I'm Mike Doherty. Thank you for standing in at such short notice."

"So," I said. "Maybe we could run through the songs? Or ... ?"

Frank's face stared at me.

"Frank?" Mike said.

"OH YES?"

"Can you teach Jon the songs?"

At this Frank raised his hands to his head and began to prise it off, turning slightly away, like he was shyly undressing. I thought I saw a flash of something under there, some contraption attached to his face.

"Hello, Jon," said the man underneath. He had a nice, ordinary face. He gave me a sheepish smile, as if to say he was sorry that I had to endure all the weirdness of the past few minutes but it was out of his hands.

Before I knew it we were onstage. As we played I watched it all – the band assiduously emulating the tinny pre-programmed sounds of a cheap, children's keyboard, the enraptured audience, and Frank, the eerie cartoon-character frontman, his facial expression immobile, his singing voice a high-pitched nasal twang.

After that night – the greatest of my life – a year passed. Life went back to normal. Then Mike phoned and asked if I wanted to be in Frank's band full time. So I quit college and moved to Manchester.

And there I was, in the passenger seat of a Transit van flying down the M6 in the middle of the night, squeezed between the door and Frank Sidebottom. Those were my happiest times – when Chris would mysteriously decide to just carry on being Frank. Nothing makes a young man feel more alive and on an adventure than speeding down a motorway at 2am next to a man wearing a big fake head. I'd watch him furtively as the lights made his cartoon face glow yellow and then black and then yellow again.

I am writing this 26 years later. The music journalist Mick Middles recently sent me his not-yet-published biography Frank Sidebottom: Out of His Head. His book captures perfectly that "rarest of journeys" when an onlooker got to see the man born Chris Sievey turn into Frank. "The moment the head is placed the change occurs. Not merely a change in attitude or outlook but a journey from one person to the other. I completely believe that Chris was born as two people." Middles likens Chris to transgender people, trapped in the wrong body.

I never understood why Chris sometimes kept Frank's head on for hours, even when it was only us in the van. Under the head Chris would wear a swimmer's nose clip. Chris would be Frank for such long periods the clip had deformed him slightly, flattened his nose out of shape. When he'd remove the peg after a long stint I'd see him wince in pain.

Frank's character was of a child in a northern town remaining assiduously immature in the face of adulthood. He was a paean to ordinariness. But Chris wasn't ordinary. He was chaotic. Sometimes, on the way back from some gig, I'd become aware that we were taking a detour to some house somewhere with some women we somehow met along the way. There would be partying while I sat outside on the sofa.

In the van I'd listen to Chris's stories, trying to understand him. He reminded me of George Bernard Shaw's unreasonable man: "The reasonable man adapts himself to the world; the unreasonable one persists in trying to adapt the world to himself. Therefore all progress depends on the unreasonable man." Chris was the unreasonable man, except the world never did adapt to him and he never made any progress. Like when Frank was asked to support the boy band Bros at Wembley. There were 50,000 people in the crowd. This was a huge stage for Frank – his biggest ever, by about 49,500 people. It was his chance to break through to the mainstream. But instead he chose to perform a series of terrible Bros cover versions for five minutes and was bottled off. The show's promoter, Harvey Goldsmith, was glaring at him from the wings. Frank sauntered over to him and said, "I'm thinking of putting on a gig at the Timperley Labour Club. Do you have any tips?"

We crisscrossed Leeds and Bury and Sheffield and Liverpool playing the same venues over and over again. Time passed and the audiences grew to 750 and sometimes even 1,000. It was consequently baffling for me to become aware of a growing sense of discontent in the van. Chris had been asking friends to perform cameos between the songs on his records. In this spirit he had asked his brother-in-law's friend Caroline Aherne to voice the part of Frank's neighbour, Mrs Merton. Afterwards, Caroline decided to keep Mrs Merton going. She somehow got her own TV show, The Mrs Merton Show. She won a Bafta. Her followup series, The Royle Family, won about seven. The Royle Family Christmas specials attracted audiences of 12 million. And meanwhile we were crisscrossing Manchester and Bury and Leeds and Sheffield and Liverpool in our Transit van.

The band's guitarist Patrick Gallagher told Middles: "It wasn't Caroline's fault. Chris was totally out of control. Whereas, say, Caroline Aherne had a single vision and could just pursue that, Chris might have a fantastic idea, and then, just as the point where it might actually get somewhere, he would spin off onto something completely different. That's OK for a while but it tended to piss people off because they never knew where they stood."

Suddenly everyone around us was becoming famous. My next-door neighbour Mani had a band. They became The Stone Roses. Our driver, Chris Evans, left us to try and make it in radio. By 2000 he was earning £35m in a year, making him Britain's highest-paid entertainer.

There is always a moment failure begins. A single decision that starts everything lumbering down the wrong path, speeding up, careering wildly, before lurching to a terrible stop in a place where nobody is interested in hearing your songs any more.

With Frank I can pinpoint that moment exactly.

"Chris wants to have a rehearsal," Mike told me one day.

"Why would Chris want to rehearse?" I said.

"To take things up a level," Mike said.

Chris's house was in a normal, nice, modern cul-de-sac. His children were playing outside. His wife, Paula, answered the door and told me to go to the spare bedroom. I walked up, passing the bathroom and glanced in. Staring back at me from the sink was Frank's head.

"In here, Jon," I heard Chris shout.

I opened the bedroom door. And stopped. A man was standing there, maroon shirt tucked smartly into neat black jeans. As I walked in he started playing a tight soul-funk riff with seeming nonchalance, but I understood it to be an act of aggression.

"Who ... are you?" I said.

"I'm Richard," he said. "From the Desert Wolves."

I'd like to say that during the years since Richard the bass player took an instant dislike to me – a dislike that only intensified during the months that followed before the band imploded, and climaxed in him yelling that he'd like to break my "keyboard-playing fingers" – he went on to have a disappointing life. But he didn't. He became one of the world's most successful tour managers, looking after Woody Allen and the Spice Girls. He currently manages the Pixies.

Richard was not the only proper musician Chris brought in. A skilful guitarist and a saxophone player turned up in the spare bedroom too. We began to sound like an excellent 1980s wedding band.

Chris told me to book us the biggest tour we'd ever undertaken. He choreographed it so I would begin the show. I'd walk on stage, alone, into a spotlight, and play a powerful C with my left forefinger. The synth brass tone – the most stirring of all the Casio tones.

We hired a people-carrier instead of a Transit van and set off to our first venue. The mood was pumped. The old band members had a certain avant-garde loucheness. But this new band: I felt like I was in a college sports team. We soundchecked. The place was packed. And then I walked out into the spotlight. And in the space of that first song – our classic Born in Timperley (to the tune of Springsteen's Born in the USA) – the audience veered from fevered anticipation into hoping we were playing a weird joke on them into realising with regret that we were not. The NME savaged us. By the end of the tour we were playing to almost-empty houses.

Chris returned to Manchester to a court summons. He owed £30,000 in back taxes. On the day of his court appearance the judge told him it was a very serious matter and had he considered a payment plan?

"Would a pound a week suffice, m'lud?" he asked.

"No it would not!" the judge shouted.

Chris never actually said to me: "You're fired." But I began to notice in the listings magazines that he was doing solo shows – just him and a keyboard. They were in the same venues we used to play, then in smaller venues, and then eventually there were no shows at all.

I moved back to London.

Ten years later I was in the park with my son when the phone rang.

"HELLO!" said Frank Sidebottom.

"It's been so long. How are you?" I said.

"Oh I'm very well actually, Mr Ronson," Frank said.

"Frank," I said. "Will you put Chris on?"

Chris filled me in on the past 10 years. Now divorced from Paula, he was an animator on the children's claymation series Pingu. He loved the work but missed Frank and wanted to bring him back from retirement. He was wondering if I'd write something about my time in the band to help him with the comeback. My story was published in the Guardian. My friend, the screenwriter Peter Straughan, asked me if I thought the story could be adapted into a film.

Not long after that, Frank was playing at a pub near my flat. I found Chris in a dressing room at the back, Frank's head in a bin bag at his feet.

"How did you lose so much weight?" I asked.

"I don't know," he said, looking pleased.

"Well, whatever you're doing," I said, "you look great."

We walked across Kentish Town Road so Chris could buy some cigarettes. He'd already given us his approval on the film and I told him the latest news. FilmFour wanted to fund its development. But – and Chris and I shuffled awkwardly around the question – what would the film actually be about? Specifically, Chris wondered, would Chris be in it? Chris had always said we could do what we wanted with the story. But he was worried that however the film might depict Chris, any reality would surely damage Frank.

I had similar concerns. Chris portrayed himself as untroubled. While a total dearth of anxiety was a fantastically enviable character trait in real life, how could we write a film about a man who just didn't care when everything went wrong and in fact found disaster funny? And if Chris was secretly more obsessive about Frank than he let on, how would he feel if the film reflected that? But there was a solution. What if we fictionalised the whole thing? It could be a fable instead of a biopic – a tribute to people like Frank who were just too fantastically strange to make it in the mainstream.

I set off for America to research other great musicians who'd ended up on the margins – Daniel Johnston, Captain Beefheart, the Shaggs. A week after I returned, I saw Frank Sidebottom's name trending on Twitter. I clicked on the link and it said "Frank Sidebottom dead". I wondered why Chris had decided to kill off Frank. So I clicked another link:

Stars lead tributes as Frank Sidebottom comic dies at 54
Chris Sievey, famous as his alter ego Frank Sidebottom, was found collapsed at his home in Hale early yesterday. It is understood that his girlfriend called an ambulance and he was taken to Wythenshawe Hospital, where his death was confirmed.
Manchester Evening News, 22 June 2010

When I'd told Chris at our last meeting how thin he looked – he didn't know it then, but it had been throat cancer.

Frank Sidebottom comic faces pauper's funeral
The comic genius behind Mancunian legend Frank Sidebottom is facing a pauper's funeral after dying virtually penniless. Chris Sievey had no assets and little money in the bank, his family have revealed.
Manchester Evening News, 23 June 2010

A pauper's funeral? What did that involve? A journey back in time 200 years? I sent out a tweet. Within an hour 554 people had donated £6,950.03. By the end of the day it was 1,632 donors raising a total of £21,631.55. The donations never stopped. We had to stop them.

A Timperley village councillor, Neil Taylor, started his own fund-raising campaign for a memorial statue – Frank cast in bronze. He sent me photographs of its journey from the foundry in the Czech Republic to its final resting place outside Johnson's the dry cleaners in Timperley. In the photographs, Frank looked like he'd been kidnapped but was fine with it.

And now our Frank film – directed by Lenny Abrahamson and starring Michael Fassbender, Maggie Gyllenhaal and Domhnall Gleeson, is going to be premiered at the Sundance film festival. As I prepare to go to it, I remember something Chris once said to me. It was late one night, and we were in the van, reminiscing about a show we'd played a few weeks earlier at JB's nightclub in Dudley. It was very poorly attended. There can't have been more than 15 people in the audience. One of them produced a ball, the audience split into teams and, ignoring us, played a game. In the van, Chris smiled wistfully.

"That Dudley gig," he said.

"Ah ha?" I said.

"Best show we ever played," he said.

 6 ) 致敬影片。非粉勿看。

整个影片是以jon的第一人称视角展开的,乐队各成员被拔高到才华横溢必须与世隔绝的程度,而jon却被描绘为才能平庸的配角。

也许导演本人是这个原型乐队的脑残粉,才会把jon这个角色不遗余力的一黑到底,尽管他才华平庸,但是他毕竟真诚付出了很多,为乐队,为音乐,何至于这样黑他,黑他真的很有快感?

没听过原型乐队的音乐,但是从影片中所能听到的,我个人觉得也很平庸,有点故作怪异哗众取宠之感(也许他们本人觉得是曲高和寡)。乐队成员一个个也都不正常吧?神经病啊,精神病史啊,暴力倾向啊,抑郁倾向啊,自杀啊什么的,难道你们有病你们就酷?可笑。

对主角Frank的偶像崇拜简直是登峰造极。

本来就是个怪胎乐队,成员都是怪胎,jon一个正常人进去,想按照正常人的路子发展乐队,结果搞砸了,于是导演说,怪胎大法好,怪胎万岁!

致敬影片。非粉勿看。

 短评

弗兰克的创作天赋源于心理创伤,他的洞察人性已然超越音乐本身。他戳穿了流行音乐的本质就是动听和朗朗上口,并不是乔恩眼中的表面文章。乔恩野心勃勃,却丝毫没意识到野心背后的尴尬处境。他对弗兰克的个人崇拜完全被面具蒙蔽了。法鲨最后才得以露脸,英式没品幽默让全片变得轻松惬意。

8分钟前
  • 大奇特(Grinch)
  • 还行

许多人同情那个音乐怪胎的障碍和创伤,但他是幸运的。你迷上了一种创造,并擅长于它,这不就是美妙人生的关键吗?真正可怜是那些努力的庸人,这电影不是对无法入世的艺术家的同情,而是对追求艺术的普通人的嘲弄,它告诉你,才华的本质就是天赋,没有那1%的灵感,你99%的努力都是白瞎。

9分钟前
  • 力荐

什么是正常?什么是古怪?什么是病态?看完这片子就是让大家扪着心口把这三个问题反复问几遍。Frank又乖又纯又真,很有才华很懂爱,他只是与主流人群不一样而已。主流总是以将异己他者化、边缘化的方式,设立所谓正常标准,可在这部片子里,处心积虑想把Frank改造正常的Jon,才是那么可笑的格格不入。

11分钟前
  • 匡轶歌
  • 推荐

虽然一直在笑,但其实电影想反映的问题并不好笑……很多地方笑完瞬间心里挺难过的。

14分钟前
  • Norloth
  • 力荐

腐国文艺青年Jon野心勃勃的想做音乐,他心目中的好音乐是indie pop,是糖水可乐,当他遇到The Soronprfbs这群走心的实验怪咖,他始终都无法融入进去,就像他一直不明白之前的键盘手为什么自杀一样。痛苦经历和心灵创伤可以激发创作灵感,做出好音乐,但这个"好"却不是谁都能懂。★★★

17分钟前
  • 亵渎电影
  • 还行

结尾Frank妈妈的话是点睛之笔:其实他一直都很有音乐天赋,精神问题不是他的灵感来源,而是他的拖累。(语文不太好么翻译出意境)。感觉Jon对Frank的误解有点像广大人民群众对梵高的误解。很多时候精神疾病和灵感并没有正面因果关系。

19分钟前
  • bayer04
  • 推荐

法叔牛逼爆了,带上头套,演技更遮不住了。

22分钟前
  • Singin'in rain
  • 推荐

法鲨迄今为止最帅的造型

26分钟前
  • 阿柳扭
  • 推荐

世界上有一些东西,存在就合理。可能到最后我们都无法认同弗兰克接近病态的自闭,但我们终究能够理解他的想法行为,直至有些心疼。但治愈和清晰的风格之后,身为一部音乐占据大量要素的电影,歌曲和唱都那么难听怎的好吗。法鲨这么小清新不太能接受,其实我们都有一个头套,只是戴在不同的地方。

27分钟前
  • 华盛顿樱桃树
  • 还行

致郁系电影,看完得吃药。(别问资源了,b站生肉,是的我就是凭着爱听懂的,bite me

29分钟前
  • 黄青蕉
  • 推荐

开始我一直不明白法鲨为什么要演个全程头套君,后来我知道了,法鲨蜀黍用行动告诉了我们有些时候,男神的演技完全不需要用脸的。影帝你好,影帝你这么萌与小清新合适吗……

34分钟前
  • Jaqen H'ghar
  • 力荐

鳖酱在这片子里露脸不超过五分钟,于是我特别希望鳖酱靠这片子与小李同期提名奥斯卡,然后鳖酱胜出#世界的恶意#

36分钟前
  • D K U N
  • 推荐

大体算一部脑补片吧,因为法斯宾德大多时候都戴着头套,观众要不断假想头套后面他的样子。整体是部挺好玩的片子,很多喜剧元素,基本都集中在弗兰克蠢萌的头套与他的天然呆上。还在一定程度拆解着独立音乐,混乱,特立独行,性与死亡。观感还不错。

38分钟前
  • 桃桃林林
  • 推荐

I love your wall, I love you all...

39分钟前
  • 影志
  • 还行

法鲨又穿著羽絨背心哭了, 还是边唱边哭!!!所有blue情绪都藏在看似逗比的头套下,越到后面越心疼frank

41分钟前
  • A L E X
  • 力荐

古怪的流行乐队同音乐背后的野心格格不入,法鲨的头套隔阂着外界的干扰,才华才得以展示,但是迎合了观众却失去了自我,这是独立音乐的悲哀困境。看不到法鲨的表情,却依然会被他磁性的声线和丰富的肢体语言惊叹,时而迸发出的英式幽默带着天然呆的笑果~

46分钟前
  • zzy花岗岩
  • 推荐

头套摘下来就感到鞭子要挥起来了

47分钟前
  • edie
  • 还行

不要毁坏我孤独的美好,让我安静地做一个怪胎。

52分钟前
  • 心生
  • 推荐

带上面具你是特立独行散发神秘乖张气质的音乐领袖,脱下面具你只是一个自卑有交流障碍的孤独症患者.那些真正懂你的人放弃了主流人生轨迹将你包围建立起一个音乐乌托邦用心维护你偏执脆弱的奇才梦.

53分钟前
  • Stardust_xy
  • 推荐

圣丹斯电影的平均水平 almost famous my ass! 迷妹们的笑点有多低 任何throwaway line都能地动山摇 电影节=集体无意识

57分钟前
  • mideastsptfire
  • 较差

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