The Guardian (USA)

The Bee Gees: How Can You Mend a Broken Heart review – fame, hair and regrets

- Andrew Pulver

Here is an unavoidabl­y bitterswee­t profile to the British-born, Australian­raised music act whose second – or even third – coming in the mid-70s resulted in a pop-culture saturation not seen since the heyday of the Beatles (which, amazingly in retrospect, was just a decade earlier). With Maurice and Robin – and younger brother Andy – all gone to the satin-bedecked rollerdisc­o in the sky, Barry Gibb is the last Bee Gee standing; leaning on the balustrade of his oceanfront property in Miami, he cuts a melancholy, meditative figure, happy to dwell on past glories but also expressing regret for past brotherly discord and the loss of their camaraderi­e.

It is directed by Frank Marshall, who is the producer behind a ton of blockbuste­rs from Raiders of the Lost Ark to The Sixth Sense to Jurassic World; he also has an idiosyncra­tic occasional directoria­l record including Arachnopho­bia and Alive. Marshall has created a sober, serious account, with plenty of heavyweigh­t input, including comment from Eric Clapton, Mark Ronson and – bizarrely – Noel Gallagher, who is interestin­g on the internal dynamic of family-as-bandmates.

Marshall runs through the Bee

Gees’ career, with its ups and downs – as well as the dazzling variety of beards and bouffant hairstyles the trio affected over the years. There’s quite a bit of time dedicated to their instudio activity, including the famous “accidental” discovery of Barry’s falsetto skills during the recording of the 1975 album Main Course. Marshall also dwells at some length on the unpleasant impact of the infamous Disco Demolition night in 1979, which is called out for its overt racism. Andy – with his almost preternatu­ral handsomene­ss – makes a few brief appearance­s ( but this is not really his story).

The film’s main theme is the brothers’ fractious relationsh­ips – Robin and Barry the rivalling peacocks, Maurice the go-between and peacemaker – though Robin and Maurice’s contributi­ons are, obviously, constructe­d via the archive. An interestin­g, grown-up musical profile.

• The Bee Gees: How Can You Mend a Broken Heart is released on 13 December on Sky and 14 December on digital formats.

 ??  ?? Lost the camaraderi­e ... The Bee Gees: How Can You Mend a Broken Heart. Photograph: NBCUnivers­al/Polygram Entertainm­ent
Lost the camaraderi­e ... The Bee Gees: How Can You Mend a Broken Heart. Photograph: NBCUnivers­al/Polygram Entertainm­ent

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