Bohemian Rhapsody” soars to the heavens as the cinematic chronicle of the rise, fall and redemption of legendary rock band Queen and its charismatic lead singer Freddie Mercury, authentically inhabited by Rami Malek: The tragedy and joy of their iconic music. Yet, what touches foremost is the love story of Freddie and his soul mate Mary, played by radiantly strong Lucy Boynton.
While lying in bed together after Freddie dazzled in Queen’s concert, he confesses to Mary that the only place where “I’m not afraid” is performing on stage. Mary loves Freddie. Still discovering his amazing voice through his music, he suffers in his inauthenticity, in his sexuality.
After returning from a lengthy Queen tour, Freddie discloses his sexuality to Mary. He says, “You are almost everything…” Mary is heartbroken. ‘Almost’ is never enough. That visceral sense of sadness resonates in Director Bryan Singer’s “Bohemian Rhapsody”.
This very much is Bryan’s film, although the studio fired him before the movie’s completion. Another director completed the filming for theatrical release. Openly gay Bryan poignantly reminds: Finding and accepting your distinct voice is scary regardless of gay or straight. Announcing who you are to the world is terrifying for all of us. Bryan, Rami and Lucy compassionately say that we try to love ourselves and gift from what is within us. Freddie Mercury brilliantly did that.
Freddie Mercury died of AIDS at 45 years old. I was a huge fan of Freddie back in high school. Freddie had flamboyant charisma and the voice of an angel. I found cathartic joy in Queen’s “Bohemian Rhapsody”, “We Will Rock You” or “We Are the Champions”. Although, Queen’s music represented freedom, it ironically cloaked Freddie’s suffering: To be himself. In his journey Rami astounds as Freddie.
Accepting his life’s deception, Rami’s Freddie tells Mary in the pouring rain, “I’m happy for you.” Lucy’s tearful visage is her hope that Freddie discovers his own joy in life. Bryan Singer’s narrative is about healing as Freddie sees what he has become and his fate. Rami is powerful vulnerability and humanity. You see his soulfulness in his eyes. You hear it in his voice. He beautifully regenerates the late Freddie’s immortal sound. Rami expresses Freddie’s vibrant spirit that captivated us all those years ago.
“Bohemian Rhapsody” begins in London with young design student and Heathrow baggage laborer Freddie. He’s the son of the Parsi family, followers of the Zoroastrian faith. Traditional Father Bromi, played by solid Ace Bhatti, disapproves of his son’s choice not to follow in his professional footsteps. Freddie wants to be a rock star.
His opportunity arises when guitar god Brian May, played by compassionately wise Gwilym Lee, needs a lead singer for his band. Brian and drummer Roger Taylor, played by spritely Ben Hardy, take a chance on Freddie. While joining the band, Freddie falls for beautiful kind Mary. Freddie eventually meets Paul, played by subversively charming Allen Leech, who reveals as the duplicitous seducer.
At times Anthony McCarten’s screenplay veers into the indulgent excess of the ‘rock star’ life, coming across as caricature. Yet, his narrative has the authentic feel for the creation of music as when Brian stamps out the beat for “We Will Rock You.”
In the end Anthony and Bryan create profound compassion for Freddie Mercury: Whether he is free to express his voice in the world, regardless of what others think. We care whether Freddie finds true love, again. “Bohemian Rhapsody” is full of sound, sadness, and joy. It will rock you, too.
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Originally published on IMBD.
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