Rocketman Didn’t Rocket For Me
With the huge success of Bohemian Rhapsody, starring academy award winner Rami Malek, I expected the same out of Rocketman, but it fell way short for me. I am a huge Elton John fan, so I was salivating to see this movie, that he had a hand in creating. I mean if Elton was on hand, it would have to be great right? I couldn’t have been more wrong.
First things first, Taron Egerton’s performance is out of this world. He sings, he acts, and he’s hot, he is the total package. The major drawback for me of his performance, the “spinach” stuck between his teeth to depict the gap in his front teeth that is Elton. From a distance it looks like a gap, but sadly all the closeups, you can clearly see it’s just black between Taron’s teeth and it becomes hard to look away and see anything else. I did enjoy the singing enough that I bought the soundtrack and it’s 100% epic and 100% Taron.
Rocketman is also invested with a string of fine supporting performances, including Richard Madden as a positively Machiavellian John Reid, Elton’s manager and sometime lover; Stephen Graham as the star’s first record company boss, Dick James; and Gemma Jones as his grandmother and champion, Ivy.
Jamie Bell, is Bernie Taupin. I didn’t know much about Bernie before the movie. I thought it was insane to learn that they Bernie and Elton didn’t compose or write music together. Bernie came up with the lyrics and then Elton just sat at his piano and just added the music as it came to him. That was all I learned about Bernie, as it was the Elton John story.
None of the makers of Rocketman, from director Dexter Fletcher to writer Lee Hall and co-executive producer Elton John himself, is describing the new blockbuster film of Elton’s singular life as a biopic. It is very deliberately presented as a musical fantasy, one that takes an impressionistic look at the key moments in the singer-songwriter’s life, set to his signature hits as they fit the arc of the story. “Based on a true fantasy” is a pleasingly appropriate tagline. Yet the movie contains plenty of Elton John facts, ensuring that there is plenty to learn about the legend.
While Rocketman is by no means a strictly chronological illustration of Elton’s life and work, it contains endless talking points, did-you-knows and lesser-spotted stories about the artist formerly known as Reginald Kenneth Dwight. We present ten things we learned from the Rocketman movie.
Elton John Facts: 10 Things We Learned From The Rocketman Movie
1: ‘Your Song’ was written in minutes at his mother’s apartment
Among the many key career moments that are vividly depicted in Rocketman, one of the most striking is when Bernie presents Elton with newly-written, coffee-stained lyrics for an early ballad. In one of the first examples of their instinctive chemistry, Elton took a set of words about a young man’s attempts to express his emotions, and the melody for it hit him almost immediately. The result was ‘Your Song’, which became his breakthrough single.
2: Elton’s father was in the RAF, and often absent
Stanley Dwight, played in the film by well-known British actor Steven Mackintosh, served as a flight lieutenant in the Royal Air Force. We see him arrive home on leave early in Rocketman, which shows the difficult and often distant relationship between father and son. Elton’s mother, Sheila, played by Bryce Dallas Howard, was more supportive, encouraging young Reggie’s early love of rock’n’roll.
3: ‘I Want Love’, a hit from 2001, describes a family scene from the 50s
In 2001, Elton won a Grammy nomination, and a UK Top 10 hit, with ‘I Want Love’, a powerful ballad from the Songs From The West Coast album. In a prime example of the way that the Rocketman movie creates a unique timeline to illustrate the star’s life, the song becomes an ensemble piece shared among young Elton’s family at their house in Pinner, Middlesex, as his father becomes the one “dead in places other men feel liberated”.
4: Elton’s grandmother Ivy was a loyal supporter
Ivy, the mother of Sheila, had a close relationship with her grandson Reggie, all the more so because of the frequent absences of his father, Stanley. Ivy was the one person who encouraged the future Elton to persevere with his early love of the piano. In the film, she is seen taking him to his first appointment at the Royal Academy – and giving him the bus fare home.
5: Industry exec Ray Williams changed Elton’s life
Rocketman gives deserving attention to the vital role played in Elton’s career by Ray Williams, who, as head of A&R at Liberty Records in 1967, placed the fateful advertisement in New Musical Express that was answered by both Reg Dwight and would-be pop lyricist Bernie Taupin. Williams is played in the film by Charlie Rowe.
6: The film includes a meticulous recreation of the famous video for ‘I’m Still Standing’
Taron Egerton leads a joyful recreation of the exuberant video for Elton’s defiant 1983 hit ‘I’m Still Standing’, which was filmed by director Russell Mulcahy in Cannes and Nice. It recaptures the “human domino” scene, as well as Elton standing on the beach in straw boater hat.
7: The “levitating” scene in Rocketman is based on a real photograph
Rocketman shows Elton and Bernie’s long-dreamed-of arrival in Los Angeles when the singer was booked to play six shows at the storied Troubadour in West Hollywood. The opening performance, on 25 August 1970, was such a sensation that music writer Robert Hilburn, of the LA Times, was moved to write: “He’s going to be one of rock’s biggest and most important stars.” The “levitation” scene in the film was inspired by a real photograph of the gig, in which Elton kicks his legs high into the air in the flamboyant style of one of his great heroes, Jerry Lee Lewis.
8: Rocketman features countless Elton anthems, but also little-known early songs
As reflected by its soundtrack, released on 24 May through EMI, the Rocketman movie not only features more than a dozen of the very biggest hits of Elton’s career but has room for some of his less-remembered early efforts. These include the non-album tracks ‘Rock And Roll Madonna’, a 1970 single, and 1968’s ‘Thank You For All Your Loving’, which he wrote with former guitarist Caleb Quaye.
9: Elton met his wife, Renate Blauel, in a studio, while finishing an album
Blauel, played in the Rocketman movie by Celinde Schoenmaker, was a sound technician who met Elton while he was on his downward spiral of drugs and drink-fueled unhappiness. Their wedding in Australia, in 1984, is part of the film; they divorced in 1988, and the artist (who had described himself as bisexual in 1976) came out as gay soon afterwards. “I wanted more than anything to be a good husband,” he said later, “but I denied who I really was, which caused my wife sadness, and caused me huge guilt and regret.”
10: Rocketman shows some heated exchanges between Elton and Bernie, but in real life, they have never fallen out
A scene in Rocketman has Bernie Taupin performing some of his lyrics from ‘Goodbye Yellow Brick Road’, when, during a heated exchange with an increasingly disconnected Elton, he sings about “going back to my plough”. The friends of over 50 years have had arguments, as the superstar wrote in a piece for the Observer newspaper just after the film’s release. “We’ve had arguments – you don’t want to get him started on the subject of some of my more outlandish stage costumes,” he reveals. “But we’ve never fallen out, despite all the ridiculous crap we’ve been through.” Thus the relationship between the Rocketman and the Brown Dirt Cowboy continues.
While Rocketman, should have soared and exceeded all expectations, it was flat and lacking in areas. Promoting it as a movie is just wrong. It. Is. A. Musical. If you go in expecting that, a musical, you will love it. I was not sold on the movie portion. I did sing and even dance in my seat, but something was missing. Parts of the movie were campy, and some just cringe worthy.
The cast of Rocketman includes:
Taron Egerton as Elton John
Jamie Bell as Bernie Taupin
Richard Madden as John Reid
Bryce Dallas Howard as Sheila Eileen
Stephen Graham as Dick James
Jason Pennycooke as Wilson
Charlie Rowe as Ray Williams
Gemma Jones as Ivy
Kit Connor as Older Reggie
Kamil Lemieszewski as Dr. Maverick / Paramedic
Steven Mackintosh as Stanley
Jimmy Vee as Arthur
Rachel Muldoon as Kiki Dee
Celinde Schoenmaker as Renate Blauel
Sharon D. Clarke as Elton’s alcoholics anonymous counsellor
Tate Donovan as Doug Weston
So if you love Elton and musicals this movie is for you. If you want more info on Elton and his life, then you will want to pass on this musical.