• Home
  • Reviews
  • Interviews
  • Lists
    • Yearly Top Tens
    • Trailers
    • Contact
    • Hire Me
    • About
Menu

World of Reel

Street Address
City, State, Zip
Phone Number
Home
IMG_6447.jpg
‘Weapons’ is 128 Minutes
IMG_6445.jpg
Michel Gondry Set To Direct ‘Les Petites Peurs’ — His First Horror Film
Screenshot 2025-06-25 114624.png
Box Office: ‘M3GAN 2.0' Bombs With Projected $10M Opening Weekend
IMG_6438.jpg
Box Office: “28 Years Later” Crashes 70% in Week 2; Will The Trilogy Capper Happen?
IMG_6437.jpg
Readers' Thoughts on ‘F1'?
Featured
Capture.PNG
Aug 19, 2019
3-Hour ‘Midsommar' Director's Cut Screened in NYC
Aug 19, 2019

This year’s 12th edition of the Scary Movies festival at Film at Lincoln Center premiered Ari Aster’s extended version of “Midsommar” this past Saturday.

Aug 19, 2019

World of Reel

  • Home
  • Reviews
  • Interviews
  • Lists
  • More
    • Yearly Top Tens
    • Trailers
  • About
    • Contact
    • Hire Me
    • About

Max Minghella’s Directorial Debut ‘Teen Spirit’ Falls Flat Despite A Strong Elle Fanning Performance [Review]

April 8, 2019 Jordan Ruimy

Music competition shows have been a TV mainstay in America ever since the Brits imported “American Idol” in the early-2000s, which in turn kickstarted a slew of copycats, including NBC’s incredibly popular “The Voice.” Eventually, movies based on the competitive nature of these shows (“American Dreamz” and “Pitch Perfect“) were made, creating a genre which, when successful, can be a biting satire of our culture’s obsession with fame.

Director Max Minghella (aka Nick the driver in “The Handmaid’s Tale“) directs “Teen Spirit,” a film that takes place in the world of British pop music competitions. There is visual panache, and a simplicity that makes it go down easy, but that’s the problem. Despite the debut director’s impressive skill, there’s a conventionality to the script that does a major disservice to both Minghella’s craft and a worthy lead performance from Elle Fanning.

Fanning plays Violet, a shy teenager that dreams of becoming a pop star by entering the British singing competition show known as Teen Spirit. Her mom (Agnieszka Grochowska), a working-class Polish immigrant, doesn’t want her daughter to participate, especially since she has to rely on Violet to help out around their working-class home, located in Isle of Wight, a remote town known more for its drinking culture and abandoned stores than anything remotely connected to pop idols.

Violet attends open-mic nights at a none-too-busy local bar every week, where she catches the attention of Vlad (a hilarious, scene-stealing Zlatko Buric). Vlad is a once-celebrated opera singer but now a schlub that sees great potential in Violet and offers to become her manager. Looking weary and beaten up by life, Vlad drinks his sorrows away but finally finds purpose in managing Violet. Vlad believes that if he can make her a better singer, thanks to his operatic background, then she can him out of his recent slump.

Minghella surely knew that what he had here was a familiar story, but despite his gritty and admirable direction it fails to break the traditional formula. Minghella’s cinematographer here is the talented Autumn Durald Arkapaw, whose overtly lavish visuals, combined with Cam McLauchlin‘s frenetic editing gives the film’s musical sequences an ADD-driven music video feel.

Violet and Vlad make a loveable surrogate father-daughter team whose camaraderie can be touching, but that’s about all that works in “Teen Spirit.” Setting his story in the world of pop music should have had Minghella amped upped to shoot darts at the industry, but instead, he seems to be embracing the notion that these kinds of TV show phenomenon are needed in our culture. The satirical edge that appeared in a film such as “Pitch Perfect” could have helped make this movie a little edgier and without the flat feel that takes over the film. [C]

In REVIEWS Tags Elle Fanning, Max Minghella, Teen Spirit, Review, American Idol, Robyn
← Best Movies of 2019 So Far ...‘The Man Who Killed Don Quixote' Is A Surreal and Absurdist Comeback for Terry Gilliam [Review] →

FOLLOW US!


Trending

Featured
Screenshot 2025-06-19 101207.png
David Lynch’s Producer Says ‘Unrecorded Night’ Was “The Best Thing He Ever Did”
Screenshot 2025-06-18 102731.png
Nolan's ‘The Odyssey' Hits Iceland For Two-Week Shoot, 1000+ Extras — Teaser in July?
Capture.png
Bond 26 to Shoot Next Year — Still No Director Attached
Screenshot 2025-06-13 115928.png
Paul Thomas Anderson’s 'One Battle After Another' Test Screens in Midwest: Two Cuts, Same Chaos
Screenshot 2025-06-13 091046.png
Critics Poll: ‘Breaking Bad' Named Best TV Series of the 2010s

Critics Polls

Featured
Capture.PNG
Critics Poll: ‘Vertigo’ Named Best Film of the 1950s, Over 120 Participants
B16BAC21-5652-44F6-9E83-A1A5C5DF61D7.jpeg
Critics Poll: Kubrick’s ‘2001: A Space Odyssey’ Tops Our 1960s Critics Poll
Capture.PNG
Critics Poll: ‘The Godfather’ Named Best Movie of the 1970s
public.jpeg
Critics Poll: ‘Do the Right Thing' Named Best Movie of the 1980s
Critics Poll: ‘Mulholland Drive' Named Best Film of the 2000s
g4.jpg
Critics' Poll: ‘Goodfellas' Named Best Movie of the 1990s
Critics Poll: ‘Mad Max: Fury Road' Named Best Movie of the 2010s
World of Reel tagline.PNG
 

Content

Contribute

Hire me

 

Support

Advertise

Donate

 

About

Team

Contact

Privacy Policy

Site designed by Jordan Ruimy © 2023