12/03/2024

Reviews - Damsel, The Sidemen Story

 

Damsel

The idea of a damsel in distress who rises to the occasion rather than waiting for a prince to rescue her is a fun idea that this film starring Millie Bobby Brown of Stranger Things leans into. In an unspecified time and place that borrows from English history and mythology, a struggling family offers their eldest daughter Elodie to the royal family to marry a prince which seems fairytale enough till we -and she – learn the terrible truth about what the marriage will mean. I should have said awful truth really because the central conceit of the film is so unintentionally silly which somewhat undermines the subsequently deadly serious proceedings resulting in an uneven if enjoyable enough result.

 


The big twist happens at the wedding ceremony whereby after they have been betrothed with blood, her new husband chucks her down a crevasse where it turns out that many previous royal brides have ended up to appease the wrath of a dragon whose children a previous King slayed in cold blood. For some reason though when the throwing over the edge happened, I could not take it seriously. I mean how is the succession ever assured if princesses keep being literally thrown away moments after marriage? And our evil dragon hunts them down by smelling the royal blood that they have just been given by a cut on the hand. Does such a small amount of blood really circulate so quickly around the body? Also does the dragon really believe that all these women are royal daughters?

The narrative is also very clumsy in placing obvious things exactly where they need to be for no good reason. I know myself this is part of the storytelling process but it needs to either be well presented or explained. Yet our heroine finds a handy cave full of fireflies that can heal wounds across a gap she is just able to jump because she has a knife from the earlier ceremony. There’s a useful crystal wall that sits just beneath an opening in the cave. Despite their predicament previous incumbents have sketched helpful clues on the cave walls.

Still, after a sluggish opening, the film manages to gain some traction as Elodie deals with the perils of being trapped underground with a dragon. It says something about the other characters that the dynamic between hunter and prey is more interesting than Elodie’s interaction with anyone else, partly due to Shohreh Aghdashloo’s excellent voice work which breathes character into this creature. The dragon is very well realised visually too and when it shoots fire it's got a real lava quality that makes this seem one of the screen's more dangerous dragons. The two play cat and mouse with each other and the results are tense and well shot meaning you sort of forget the odd method by which they began. The ending gives a suitable fiery climax albeit with an awkward redemption for our scaly antagonist which sort of ignores all the things she has previously done. All three main characters being female also adds a different tone albeit only by making the male characters little more than set dressing.



The rest of the cast are unseen for the bulk of the film; Ray Winstone brings customary heft to the under written role of Elodie’s conflicted father, poor Nick Robinson gets very little to work with as Prince Henry who seems to have no opinion on the terrible thing he’s partaken in. There’s a good sisterly chemistry between Millie Bobby Brown and Brooke Carter as Floria whilst Angela Basset brings some fire to the role of Elodie’s stepmother. Robin Wright is evil enough as Isabelle though is another underserved character. Millie Bobby Brown herself is used to her characters suffering and is at her best when she goes full Die Hard though the role is not as suited to her as that of Enola HolmesIf you can get past the bizarre idea, Damsel is entertaining and sometimes exciting but with a little more script writing rigour could have been even better.

The Sidemen Story

For over ten years The Sidemen, collectively and individually, have provided some of YouTube’s best content and maintained consistently high views during a decade when other personalities have come and gone. Their brand of challenges, games and generally boisterous material may have started off mostly about football but has expanded into all kinds of exploits. Nowadays goal scoring on a muddy field and messing about in their house has been replaced by videos tilting for the same ambition as Mr Beast. When I first heard about this Netflix documentary I’d imagined it would be something of a vanity project whereas The Sidemen Story has compiled a portrait of seven individuals who are very familiar to anyone whose watched their stuff yet adding new perspectives that we didn’t know. It may skip over some years but the essence of what makes The Sidemen so successful – and a few of the hurdles along the way - is all contained in this well produced film.

If you’ve never watched any of the Sidemen videos thinking they are just about football or sport then you might be surprised as just how varied content they produce. Amongst the best are the Hide and Seek videos which use the simple premise of them trying to find other YouTubers in an array of interesting locations from a mansion to the interior of a sports stadium to an area of London and beyond. They started their collaborations at the end of their teens and now approaching their thirties remain more popular than ever. Whichever way you slice the stats they are as huge as any other famous person you could mention and as the film points out their charity football match had more views that the Cup Final.

While unique as a seven-piece group- most vloggers are individuals or less defined groups- The Sidemen have also been at the vanguard of the move from television to YouTube for a younger generation. Someone says in the film “TV is dead” and all of the success of the group has been self-generated. Even when they released a Xmas single in 2022- the film shows the chaotic promo campaign through London on an open topped bus- it was wholly independent of any music business involvement.



The film starts to tell their story though does make some chronological leaps that miss out the growth of the brand, especially the merch (clothing, books), the early focus primarily on football and the Sidemen Houses. Thus, we leap from 2014 when their success is becoming bigger to 2017, the year of the iconic diss tracks. The definitive explanation as to why KSI left and then drifted back is not quite here but it seems that the anger in some of those videos, though using outrageously funny lines, was real enough for a while. Yet the sting in the tail is that this fall out made The Sidemen more popular than ever. You sense that the issue of KSI’s popularity beyond The Sidemen – he is also a successful boxer and rapper- can sometimes be an irritant amongst the others.

Each of the seven is profiled briefly though with enough detail to show how they fit together underlined by sequences where they are all chatting. The documentary doesn’t flinch from also showing some of the harder moments along the way notably Ethan’s mental health issues and the pressures that fame brings. Yet compared to many who find themselves in the spotlight they seem to deal with it gracefully. This may be because they are being themselves in the videos and as clips here show and is always evident in the videos treat their fans with respect and humour. 

There’s some behind the scenes footage which inevitably show that making these videos is tremendous fun and testimony from friends, YouTube people and even Mr Beast himself. The results are refreshingly honest, which I suppose is exactly what The Sidemen are.

 Damsel and The Sidemen Story are both currently available on Netflix.

 

 


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