Telstar: The Joe Meek Story (2008)

6.4/10
79% – Critics
69% – Audience

Telstar: The Joe Meek Story Storyline

In the early 1960s self-taught electronics whizz Joe Meek amazingly produces a string of home made hit singles from his studio in his flat above a leather shop in London. His biggest success is the instrumental ‘Telstar’ but accusations of plagiarism delay royalties. Joe’s mercurial temper causes his artists to forsake him for other labels, in particular his young lover Heinz Burt. Now in debt and after unwisely parting from his chief financier Major Banks, Joe finds himself unable to control his life. Increasingly paranoid, believing he is being bugged by rival record companies and that everybody is out to get him, the last straw comes when landlady Violet tells him she is selling the building in which he lives. Joe had once confiscated a shotgun from Heinz. Now it is dangerously close at hand and about to end the Joe Meek story.—don @ minifie-1

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Telstar: The Joe Meek Story Movie Reviews

A Good Enough Film

I do know something about the mad genius that was Joe Meek. Enough to know that putting his turbulent life into one film is not easy, others have questioned why other formative elements of his life was missed out, if a film is good enough though, surely it will engage those who have seen and enjoyed it to look into it further, using the medium we are now, the internet?

Con O’Neill is excellent as the troubled Meek, he has to dominate the film and this he does. While it’s true that others in the story were sometimes rather younger than the actors playing them, remember back in this period, the ‘teenager’ as we now understand it, was only starting to emerge, young people then still often looked, acted, dressed older.

They usually left school at 14-15, at around 18 (like Meek) many had to do military service, hand me down clothes from parents were common. All this was changing, as part of the social changes sign posted by the music, which Meek played a part in but, as shown by his dismissal of The Beatles he was doomed not to recognise fully and play a further part in.

Meek was the British Phil Spector. But he, as the film well shows, did not enjoy the financial rewards of hits, but both were innovative, reclusive, obsessive and dangerous around firearms. (Given just how many times Spector drew guns on some of the most famous music stars, as well as lovers, business associates, was anyone really surprised at the tragic events at Spector’s home in 2003, I certainly thought ‘he’s finally done it’.)

Most music or music based biopics fail as films, while ‘Telstar’ is not up there with the stunning exception that is Ian Curtis biopic ‘Control’, it’s way better than ‘Great Balls Of Fire’.

I was certainly kept engaged by this film.

Fame, fortune and it all goes horribly wrong

Saw this last night at the LFF, and while it does betray its stagey origins from time to time, there is much to enjoy in this biopic of Joe Meek, legendary music producer and nutcase. The film doesn’t shy away from the murkier aspects of this mercurial character’s life – the drugs, the rent boys, the cottaging, the verbal and physical abuse meted out to all and sundry – but Meek does emerge as something of a sympathetic character. I guess that’s why so many people put up with him – there must have been something charming about him.

Good performances – including a pointless cameo from Kevin Spacey as Meek’s financial backer, the appropriately named Major Banks. Standouts include the young actors playing Heinz and Patrick, the latter being a general factotum-cum-boyfriend who is one of the few people loyal to the last.

Nick Moran should be commended for bringing this quirky, sometime shocking story to the screen – whether it will find an audience beyond 60s music fans or those with a morbid curiosity for stories of pop scandals will remain to be seen.

Incidentally, I live in Islington and walked home past 304 Holloway Road, where almost the whole film takes place. It did send shivers down my spine.

Stellar Performance from Con O’Neil

British films made by people like Richard Curtis (The Boat that Rocked et al) tend to look at the swinging 60’s of London with heavily rose tinted spectacles. All pimms, waistcoats, flower power and crazy shenanigans. All very well but not much to do with reality – I thought Austin Powers would have killed that off in the 90’s….which is why Nick Moran’s directorial debut is such a breath of fresh air.

For those that don’t know the Joe Meek at the centre of this film – control freak, gay in the wrong decade, tone deaf drug addicted musical pioneer – get ready for a roller-coaster of a ride. Without wishing to spoil the arc of the story, this is a classic tale of a man with a vision breaking new ground…with disastrous consequences.

Con O’Neil dominates this film with a superb manic performance which captures the claustrophobic and chaotic feel of the centre of Joe’s universe, his recording studio above a handbag shop in central London in the early 60’s. Ably supported by a host of good actors – in particular Kevin Spacey, Pam Ferris, and (even) James Cordon are all spot on. What looks like a cod-60’s Curtis-esquire disaster for the first 20 minutes heads somewhere altogether darker once the action cranks up as Joe starts to get some no.1 hits in the charts.

A must watch cautionary tale about fame, love, jealously, paranoia and music, this is a fine carachter piece with some excellent nuanced comedy amidst the darker elements, it’s a really well executed debut from Mr Moran…enjoy.