Four out of
Five stars
Running time:
112 mins
An enjoyable teen comedy with likeable characters, a witty script, strong performances and some great tunes – this is the film the High School Musical movies should have been.What's it all about?Directed by Todd Graff, Bandslam stars newcomer Gaelan Connell (who looks like a cut-price version of Shia LaBeouf) as bullied teenager Will Burton, who's delighted when his mother (Lisa Kudrow) announces they're moving towns and vows to be cooler at his new high school. His wish quickly comes true when he's taken under the wing of school hottie Charlotte (Disney popstrel Aly Michalka), who asks him to help get her band into shape for the upcoming Bandslam competition, where she's hoping to defeat her annoyingly popular ex-boyfriend (Scott Porter).
Since he was roundly ignored at his previous school, Will is duly dazzled by Charlotte's kindness, attention and general hotness, but he also finds himself falling for his quirky, book-obsessed study partner Sa5m (“The five is silent”), played by High School Musical graduate Vanessa Hudgens.
The GoodThe performances are excellent, particularly Aly Michalka, whose perky personality (and general hotness) is extremely appealing. Connell's a little dopey in the lead, but he has good chemistry with Hudgens, who gets to display some impressive comic timing and is allowed to be a lot sexier here than she was in the High School Musical movies.
The witty script is superb, with sharply drawn, likeable characters that, crucially, actually listen to the sort of music kids genuinely like rather than the bland, studio-dictated rubbish you normally get. Similarly, the band themselves are also pretty good and the climactic musical numbers are very catchy.
The GreatOn top of that, the film neatly side-steps several of the usual cliches and delivers a decent message without ever being preachy and patronising or resorting to sickly-sweet sentimentality.
Worth seeing?With a strong script and characters you can actually relate to, Bandslam is a hugely entertaining, frequently funny and emotionally engaging teen flick that's a far cry from the plastic-packed blandness of the High School Musical movies. Highly recommended.