Posts Tagged One Love

Bob Marley: One Love – Cinematic Portrayal of a Musical Icon in 1970s Jamaica

394 words, 2 minutes read time.

“Bob Marley: One Love” is a cinematic portrayal of the legendary musician Bob Marley, set against the backdrop of a politically volatile Jamaica in the late 1970s. The film has been met with mixed reactions, with some praising its celebration of Marley’s music and others critiquing its handling of the complex political climate of the time.

The period from 1976 to 1978 in Jamaica was characterized by intense political conflict between the People’s National Party (PNP) and the Jamaica Labour Party (JLP). The socialist PNP, led by Prime Minister Michael Manley, was implementing transformative social reforms, while the conservative JLP, under Edward Seaga, opposed these changes. This ideological battle manifested in violent confrontations, with affiliated gangs contributing to the unrest, especially around the 1976 elections.

Amidst this backdrop, Bob Marley emerged as a unifying figure. His music addressed social injustices and political tensions, and he became a symbol of peace. The film depicts Marley’s involvement in the One Love Peace Concert of 1978, where he united the rival political leaders on stage, and the assassination attempt on him in 1976, highlighting his influence on the peace efforts.

Critics have pointed out that the film tends to gloss over the depth of the political challenges Marley faced. The Guardian review suggests that the film’s depiction feels deferential and formulaic, potentially sanitizing the era’s violence. The Twin Cities review echoes this sentiment, noting that the narrative stumbles in its exploration of the political intricacies. Those views are ones with which I have to agree.

Specific scenes, such as Marley’s performance at the Rainbow and the Wailers playing football, are criticized for offering a sanitized version of events. The Camden New Journal describes these portrayals as lacking the impact Marley truly had. Kingsley Ben-Adir’s performance as Marley is praised, but the direction is said to have resulted in a portrayal that feels more like a thumbnail sketch than a fully fleshed-out character.

While “Bob Marley: One Love” brings Marley’s music to a new generation, it falls short in its exploration of the political context that so profoundly influenced his life and work. The film’s portrayal of Marley as a peacemaker is poignant, yet it leaves room for a more nuanced examination of the political unrest that defined Jamaica during this pivotal period.

Reviewed by Pat Harrington

Picture credit: By Paramount Pictures – Digital Asset Catalog, Fair use, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?curid=74240456

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Good Vibrations

Good Vibrations PosterAnyone in Belfast who plays in a band, appreciates music or even who buys records regularly will probably have come across Terri Hooley. Terri would admit that he is an unlikely businessman. He certainly can’t claim to be the most successful record shop owner in history, but then again, the Virgin Megastores, Zavvi, Tower Records and Our Price have passed into history and HMV is in deep trouble but Good Vibrations manages to hang on in there, despite it all.

The crazy thing is that Terri Hooley opened his shop in Belfast in the mid-seventies in the city’s most-bombed street above a dusty whole food shop run by the Guru Maharaj Ji’s Divine Light Mission. The city in the 1970s was a bleak place. Belfast city centre emptied at 6 o’clock of all but the brave or the foolhardy. The conflict – which Ulsterfolk euphemistically call ‘The Troubles’ – was at the height of its random tit-for-tat viciousness. People retreated in the evenings to the ghettos where they lived in search of some security. They socialised where they could; in local clubs, pubs, parish halls, Orange halls or illegal sheebeens. They rarely – if ever – met with people from ‘the other side’.

The novelist Glenn Patterson and Colin Carberry have conjured up a film script that really captures the nature of this anarchic mould -breaking larger-than-life character. Their script buzzes with dark Belfast humour and a soundtrack that brings everything to the mix from Hank Williams’ I Saw the Light, Phil Spector’s girl bands, through to Rudi’s Big Time and of course, the Undertones’ Teenage Kicks. The action was intercut with contemporary footage of background events. This gave an immediate reminder of the very real dangers stalking the city then. Many folk of a certain age would have been delighted to see one-time Scene-Around-Six news anchor Barry Cowan, (sadly no longer with us), on-screen again.

Terri’s mum was a devout Methodist and his dad was a revolutionary socialist. He never quite fitted in to Ulster’s divided society. In the Sixties, he protested against the Vietnam war and in favour of nuclear disarmament, but as the Troubles took hold many of his contemporaries forsook protesting for peace in favour of violence.

His first love was music, especially reggae, but he became enthused by the energy of the growing punk movement which drew young folk from both communities to the rundown Pound Club on the edge of the city centre to hear bands like Rudi and the Outcasts. This led him into launching a record label to introduce Rudi to a wider public. Other bands followed. The ‘big one’ was The Undertones from Derry whose single, Teenage Kicks went stratospheric after it was taken up by the influential Radio One presenter, John Peel.

Despite its bleak environment of bombs everywhere, soldiers on the streets, officious cops and random, casual violence, this is a real fun, feel good movie. Dormer’s Hooley often messes things up, not least his life and his relationship with his wife, Ruth. He’s more interested in the music than making money from it.

Some scenes will haunt the viewer for life. I was struck by the scene where Terri hears ‘that’ Undertones song for the first time and fell about laughing at a scene where a bemused British soldiers stops Hooley and the band in the van only to discover that they are both Protestants and Catholics from north, east and west Belfast. Terri had never asked them what they were.

Coming out at a time when old divisions threaten to open up again in Belfast, this movie reminds us that we can do better. In the country of the blind the one-eyed man is king. Roll on the DVD release. One Love!

PS.  The DVD is now available,

By David Kerr

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