I’m
a huge Bobby Darin fan, but I somehow never got around to watching this biopic directed
by and starring Kevin Spacey. I know
we’re not supposed to watch Kevin Spacey movies because he’s a terrible person
and everything. However, my love of all
things Darin outweighs my feelings for Spacey.
Beyond
the Sea starts off on an awkward meta note as Bobby Darin (Spacey) is in the
middle of making a movie about himself. He faces criticism that he’s too old to play
the part. Spacey must have felt that too
as he was older at the time of filming than Darin ever lived to be. When a worker calls the temperamental Darin an
asshole, his manager (John Goodman) yells, “He might be an asshole, but he’s
our asshole!”, a sentiment I’m sure that many of Spacey’s inner circle felt. All the stuff regarding Darin’s obsessive use
of toupees probably hit home for Spacey as well. On downtime from filming, Bobby connects with
a young boy who is playing him in the film-within-a-film. He then figures out the only way to tell his
story is by having flashbacks to childhood.
It’s funny in these flashback scenes seeing Spacey playing Darin as a teenager. It’s even funnier seeing guys like Goodman and Bob Hoskins playing young versions of their characters. I mean it’s a stretch to see Spacey do it. It’s even worse when they do it.
After
the goofy set-up, we do get a couple of strong scenes. The routine biopic stuff (especially the
scenes detailing Darin’s marriage to Sandra Dee, played by Kate Bosworth), are
superficial, but are well-acted enough to keep you involved. Unfortunately, the movie only gets more
aimless and unfocused as it goes along.
It
also sort of speeds through Darin’s rise as a teen idol. Even after he becomes the crooner we all know
and love, it still seems rushed. The
film oddly spends too much time on his folk song phase. I guess they were trying to show there was
more to his repertoire than his early stuff.
It’s just that sulky Darin is not nearly as much fun as suave Darin.
Like
most biopics, it can’t cover EVERYTHING.
I would’ve liked to have seen some of his TV work mentioned. Despite that, I was still inclined to give
this ** ½ based on the music and Spacey’s admittedly fine performance. Then the ending, where Darin and the kid who
plays him rewrite their happy ending, came along. It’s jaw-dropping bad on just about every level
and ends things on a goofy note.
Speaking
of notes, it’s great hearing Darin’s hits like “Mack the Knife, “Beyond the
Sea”, “Dream Lover”, and “Splish-Splash”. What’s amazing is that all the songs are
performed by Spacey, who is an incredible mimic. (I was a bit miffed that he didn’t include my
personal favorite Darin tune, “Clementine” on the soundtrack.) You get the feeling though it might’ve been
better if Spacey had just released an album of Darin covers instead of doing a
whole movie. While Spacey paid Darin’s
music a proper tribute, the film itself is majorly lacking Darin’s sense of
showmanship. Bobby deserved
better.
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