Backbeat Movie Review
Backbeat Review
"Backbeat" Overview

Rating: R
1993
Cast and Crew
Director : Iain SoftleyProducer : Finola Dwyer,Stephen Woolley
Screenwiter : Iain Softley,Michael Thomas,Stephen Ward
Starring : Stephen Dorff,Ian Hart,Gary Bakewell,Chris O'Neill,Scot Williams,Sheryl Lee
If you think the story of the Beatles begins in February 1964 on the stage of
The Ed Sullivan Show then you need a pretty serious history lesson. Backbeat
provides it, traveling back in time to the earliest days of the ‘60s, when the
Fab Four were a starving band of outsiders living a fun but also fairly hellish
life on the mean streets of Hamburg.
You may have heard of Pete Best, the band’s original drummer. He’s on the scene
here (not Ringo), and so is bassist Stuart Sutcliffe, the so-called “fifth
Beatle,” the one around whom this telling of the Beatles tale revolves.
More of an aspiring painter than an aspiring rock star, legend has it that
Sutcliffe (Stephen Dorff, in the best performance of a very uneven career)
stuck around as long as he did only because John Lennon (Ian Hart, playing
Lennon in a film for the second time here), had a crush on him and urged him to
stick with it. Lennon may have also had a thing for Astrid Kirchherr (Sheryl
Lee), Sutcliffe’s German photographer girlfriend and the person who gets the
credit for giving the boys the haircuts that earned them so much early
attention.
The film does a marvelous job of depicting the divey clubs of Hamburg where the
leather-clad Beatles, hyped up on speed given to them by club owners eager to
keep them playing all night, power through set after set of superfast R&B. The
tracks recorded for the film by punk-leaning musicians have a real edge to
them. More foot stompers than toe tappers, they sound youthful, energetic, even
somewhat desperate.
As John and Stu carouse, circle around Astrid, and trade cutting barbs while
they discuss Stu’s future with the band, Paul McCartney (Gary Bakewell) and
George Harrison (Chris O'Neill) are mere supporting players, serving mainly to
complain about Stu’s lack of professionalism. It’s the interchanges between
John and Stu that move the film along. John is ultimately unsuccessful in
convincing Stu to keep at it, and Stu stays behind to study art when the
Beatles head back to Liverpool in 1961. Stu sticks to his artistic guns, just
as John sticks to his, and you wonder what Stu will think about that decision
in the years that follow, until you learn that he doesn’t live long enough to
contemplate it.
It’s Stu’s extremely untimely death from a cerebral hemorrhage in April 1962
(at the age of 21) that gives the film its heartbreaking coda. Less than a year
later, of course, the Beatles, with Best gone and Ringo in tow, are on their
way to unimaginable fame, while nothing is left of Stu but a few rooms full of
abstract canvases and a portfolio of photographs of him taken by his girlfriend.
Backbeat is a tragedy for sure, but it’s a tragedy with one hell of a
soundtrack.
Reviewer: Don Willmott





