Thursday, 2 October 2025

Critical Week: Ready, aim, fire

Things are definitely cranking up in London as awards season takes over screening rooms across the city. Many of the big hitters from recent festivals are being screened for those of us who vote in various awards. There's not a free evening in my diary for a few weeks. After a clash prevented me from attending the only press screening of Paul Thomas Anderson's One Battle After Another, they made public showings available, so I was able to watch it in glorious VistaVision this week. It stars Leonardo DiCaprio, Benicio Del Toro, Regina Hall and Chase Infiniti (above) and is a thrillingly entertaining rollercoaster ride.  

BEST OUT THIS WEEK:
Urchin • The Smashing Machine
The Lost Bus • The Shadow's Edge
Scared Sh*tless
PERHAPS AVOID:
Him • The Ice Tower
ALL REVIEWS >
I also caught up with Richard Linklater's Blue Moon, in which Ethan Hawke gives a superb one-man-show kind of turn as legendary lyricist Lorenz Hart. Riz Ahmed and Lily James are excellent in David Mackenzie's nerve-jangling and smartly twisty thriller Relay. Marlon Wayans and Tyriq Withers give it their all in the horror thriller Him, but it never amounts to much. And Malcolm McDowell turns up in The Partisan, the intriguing but dryly told true story of a female Polish spy (played by Morgane Polanski) working for Britain during WWII. I also attended live performances of the disco-tastic KC and the Sunshine Band musical Get Down Tonight at Charing Cross Theatre and Bogota at Sadler's Wells East.

Films this coming week include George Clooney in Noah Baumbach's Jay Kelly, Idris Elba in Kathryn Bigelow's A House of Dynamite and Diego Luna and Jennifer Lopez in Kiss of the Spider Woman. The 69th London Film Festival kicks off on Wednesday with Rian Johnson's Knives Out whodunit Wake Up Dead Man. And there's a live performance of Ghost Stories at the Peacock Theatre.

Stage: That's the way I like it

Get Down Tonight
The KC and the Sunshine Band Musical
music and lyrics Harry Wayne Casey
book JF Lawton
with Ross Harmon, Paige Fenlon, Adam Taylor, Annabelle Terry, Aaron Archer, Rachel Kendall Brown, Eve Drysdale, Finlay Oliver
director-choreographer Lisa Stevens
musical director Kevin Oliver Jones
sets Bretta Gerecke • costumes Rachel Ryan
lighting Jai Morjaria • sound Chris Whybrow
Charing Cross Theatre, London • 19.Sep-15.Nov.25
★★★★

Harry Wayne Casey, also known as KC, provides the songs for this lively meta-musical about his life, including the iconic hits he made famous with his Sunshine Band. Each of these numbers is a total banger, so the show plays out like a raucous party. But it's also sharply well written, humorously deconstructing the stage musical formula to tell Casey's story in a way that's thoroughly involving. Working with a terrific live four-piece band, the performers prove to be seriously gifted, diving into the riotous disco choreography with infectious gusto.

After opening with a full-on glitter-ball rendition of Keep It Comin' Love, the story settles in on Harry (Harmon) and his best friend Dee (Fenlon) as teens dreaming of stardom in early 1970s Miami. Later they are joined by their friends Gina (Terry), who has a crush on Harry, and Orly (Taylor), a groovy Vietnam veteran who helps Harry explore his queer side. These four encourage each other to shoot for the stars, so Harry finds ways to record his music, leading to enormous success that changes his life.

While the basic narrative isn't particularly new, the storytelling is buoyant and often exhilarating, which adds a kick to several quieter, more emotional moments. A soulful rendition of Please Don't Go has particular poignancy as these friends confront the reality that they will need to go their separate ways. And because this is a story about someone who simply wants to make people happy, the explosions of joy are thoroughly irresistible, urging us to get up on our feet and dance along with the cast. Of course, we are encouraged to do just that in the wildly exuberant extended curtain call.

The four leads and four background artists adeptly provide soaring vocals, full physicality and punchy emotional beats. Their talent is explosive, augmented by fabulously sparkly costumes, colourful lighting and iconic period dance moves that feel almost weightless, simply because they are having so much fun on-stage. The story is a gentle reminder that success isn't as instant, as easy or as enduring as we all would like it to be. And the show, like Casey's music, suggests that perhaps we would be happier if we spent more time putting on our boogie shoes, shaking our booties and getting down tonight.



For details,
GET DOWN TONIGHT >
photos by Danny Kaan • 30.Sep.25