I probably values this a little bit more than I should have based on the different feel than this movie had over so many movies like it that have come before. After all, we've seen this movie a ton of times - a wildly talented but very flawed person overcomes all obstacles to become famous. While some of that happened in this movie it really wasn't that movie at all. Usually it is drugs, alcohol or some other vice that does the damage. In this movie the character is flawed in ways that are relate-able to most of us (especially those with kids) and for that reason it makes it almost that much more uncomfortable to watch.
The ending is fantastic, and in retrospect had I paid attention a little more I would have seen it coming.
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I saw this movie for one reason: I saw that the awesome fireman's wife from Chernobyl is in a movie. Boom, I'm there. And now I have one of my favorite movies of the year and a big ol crush on Jessie Buckley. So damn talented and her voice is amazing and she keeps you CAPTIVATED on that screen. Love her!! Also....Susannah....for peeps of a certain age, you may know her from Ace Ventura 2 When Nature Calls as the princess! It was bugging me all movie where I knew her from.
Really enjoyed this film - Rose-Lynn is instantly likeable and you find yourself rooting for her, in spite of her selfish behaviour. Some great comic moments, especially from Julie Walters, whose understated acting had me in tears by the end. Overall, a really genuine and heartwarming film.
The "Nashville" of the protagonist was in Glasgow and inside.
There is a huge swell of love for Wild Rose, it is a popular film. So knowing this perhaps when I sat down to watch it I had high expectations. All of us say we do not let others views colour our expectations or even opinions of films but truth be told it is hard not to.
Jessie Buckley is always a good screen presence, she was great in director Tom Harper’s TV adaptation of War and Peace, so far so good.
The story itself is fun and kept my attention, the directing keeps things moving along at a pace and all the characters are big enough and colourful enough to be intriguing but there are few huge stumbling blocks along the road.
Honestly the biggest hill I encountered is if you sell or deal in Class A drugs and you go to prison for it and are released on licence you will not get into the United States of America. There is more than a whiff of wish fulfilment fantasy in the story. An upper-class lady just loves rough at the edges, sweary, women, she just loves her and her kids love country music. I know children that would not watch Dr. Who because Peter Capaldi was ‘old’ so these country music-loving young, modern, children are at best an amazing rarity. The husband was so clearly a pantomime baddy, the character the audience could hate, it was ridiculous. Why do the makers of drama still use this hackneyed and as old as time itself conceit? It is probably just me but I hate it. You end up with a one-dimensional character whose only motive, often disguised skilfully by script, actor or both, is to be be ‘bad’.
It is not all bad. Clearly the writer has tried to add some jeopardy into the proceedings by having Rose-Lynn messing up on her ambitions, finding out Nashville is nothing like she thought but, rather childishly, every problem, every obstacle, in Rose-Lynn’s life/singing ambitions fades away to nothing rather quickly so that she can get a final denouement.
It’s all too neat, all too great in the end for Rose-Lynn.
This is more like an upgraded soap storyline than anything hard-hitting or gritty but the trouble is I think the makers were trying for hard-hitting and gritty.
Ultimately Wild Rose is truthfully Mild Rose.
Wild Rose (2018)
Dir: Tom Harper
Wild Rose is a British musical drama following a Scottish woman who's fresh out of prison juggling her job and two children whilst attempting to pursue her dream of becoming a country music star. She soon gets her chance when she travels to Nashville Tennessee on a life-changing trip to discover her true voice.
Wild Rose is a very heartfelt film that felt incredibly real, the way that this woman is just doing her best to get by, whilst also trying to follow her dream, who is hindered by her past actions and struggles to manage her busy life and goals equally. This film shows how difficult it can be for people in more difficult situations to choose between their families and doing what they've always dreamed of.
I liked this film, it gave me a warm, fuzzy feeling inside. It wasn't perfect though. There were a few moments throughout this film where honestly the story just got lost, and I didn't know where they were going with it, but it all managed to fall back into place for a bittersweet ending for our main character.
The title character of Rose-Lynn was portrayed by Jessie Buckley, who for me was completely unknown before I saw this film, I'd never seen any of her previous work but she was incredible in this part, she has an incredible voice for country music which was fantastic for the soundtrack of this film.
Overall, I thought Wild Rose was a really good, but bittersweet film that could be a British film contender at the BAFTAs in 2020 in my opinion. I'd definitely recommend it.
Shout by Lee Brown Barrow Movie BuffVIP 3BlockedParent2019-12-14T19:31:10Z
I'm not a massive fan of country music - falls just behind heavy metal, brass band, and whatever that dirge the Spice Girls piped out, in my ranking of music genres I tend to avoid - but this is a good film, with a standout performance by Buckley as a woman torn between her dreams and her family.