The film opens with Elton John (Taron Egerton) checking himself into a rehab facility in the 1990s, seeking help for his many addictions: alcohol, cocaine, marijuana, sex, bulimia and anger management issues, to name just a few.
Within the context of a group therapy session, he tells the whole story of his life to the group - and consequently to us the audience - beginning right at the beginning.
As a young boy, Reginald Dwight (Matthew Illesley) shows an incredible aptitude for playing the piano, despite never having studied music or taken lessons on the instrument. His mother (Bryce Dallas Howard) organises piano lessons for him, and he grows in leaps and bounds in his ability.
At the age of eleven, Reggie (now played by Kit Connor) is encouraged to apply for a scholarship to the Royal Academy of Music. He is accepted into the academy, and by the time he is grown up, he is playing at local venues - mainly in bars - and wowing audiences.
![]() |
Young Reginald Dwight (Matthew Illesley) conducting an imaginary orchestra. |
By this time, he goes by the name Elton John - mainly to distance himself from his largely absent father, who never showed him any love at all - and collaborates on all his songs. You see, while he is an amazing pianist and singer, he cannot write lyrics. He is paired with writer Bernie Taupin (Jamie Bell), a partnership that fans of Elton John will be aware still exists to this day, despite the fact they have never written a song in the same room together.
There is a lot more to the story than what I am telling here, including a mostly secret affair with his manager, John Reid (Richard Madden) and a marriage of convenience to his recording engineer Renate (Celinde Schoenmaker), and of course many many performances and concerts, interspersed with sinking further and further into depression, isolation and addiction.
The screenplay, by Lee Hall, is absolutely wonderful, telling the story of Elton John's rise to fame and his monumental fall from grace, all told through the lens of his many musical hits. Almost all of his greatest hits are used throughout the film, the lyrics taking on all new meanings as they are aligned to particular points in his life (of course, this part of the story is purely fiction, as Bernie Taupin wrote all his lyrics completely separate from Elton John, so the songs are if anything personal to Taupin rather than John).
![]() |
Elton John (Taron Egerton) in the recording studio, recording his first album. |
Matthew Margeson's score is interspersed with the songs in a way that makes the whole film feel like one continuous piece of music. His composition is so clever in this respect, so much as to almost become unnoticeable.
I'm sure it will come as no surprise to you that one of the greatest parts of this film - aside from the wonderful music - is Julian Day's costume design. All of Egerton's outfits are beautifully reminiscent of Elton John's unique style and dress sense, in a way that just makes his portrayal all the more real and authentic.
Adam Murray's choreography also makes everything seem even more real, with the concert performances all looking just like the real events, and the occasional large-scale production numbers providing the icing on the cake and lifting the story out of reality at just the right moments.
![]() |
John Reid (Richard Madden) and Elton John (Taron Egerton). |
This film is guaranteed to make you laugh, make you cry, and leave you in awe of Elton John's talent as a composer and performer. Pay close attention to the scene where he auditions for the Royal Academy of Music to see what I mean; he plays Mozart's Turkish March on the piano, having only ever heard it the once, and never seen the score.
Director Dexter Fletcher has made an absolutely beautiful film, with plenty of emotional highs and lows. This is one of the few films I have seen on the big screen that I would happily pay the admission price to see again. If you are a fan of Elton John - or even someone who has liked just one of his songs - I strongly suggest you see this film; it is truly magnificent, and sure to win all sorts of awards and accolades.
10 out of 10.
No comments:
Post a Comment