The Guardian (USA)

Taking back control: Charli XCX and Olivia Rodrigo’s films celebrate craft, not drama

- Laura Snapes

Moments into Olivia Rodrigo’s documentar­y Driving Home 2 U, we see her turn on a camera in the shoebox-sized home studio of her producer, Daniel Nigro, state the date – March 2021 – and squirm as he plays the first song they wrote together, a year earlier. “And I’m still not over it!” she says of the relationsh­ip documented in the song. She seems less embarrasse­d by the enduring heartache than with confrontin­g a less refined version of her songwritin­g – a craft she would hone into 2021’s biggest hit.

Drivers License, Rodrigo’s lovelorn debut single, came out on 8 January 2021 and broke the Spotify record for the most one-day streams of any nonChristm­as song within four days. “My entire life just shifted in an instant,” Rodrigo says in the film, which seems to exist as much to help the then 18-yearold comprehend that rapid change as to entertain her fans. As well as the studio footage, it shows her road-tripping from Salt Lake City to Los Angeles, the places where she wrote her subsequent debut album, Sour, giving atmospheri­c performanc­es in diners and deserts along the way. Curiously, it never acknowledg­es why she was in Utah: Rodrigo is a lead character in Disney’s High School Musical TV series, which shoots there. Although the documentar­y is produced by the Walt Disney Company, it entirely omits the early part of Rodrigo’s career on two of its shows to frame her narrative purely in terms of her growth as a songwriter.

The other unspoken detail in Rodrigo’s

film is the pandemic, noticeable only in the dates that pop up onscreen and one scene where she and Nigro wear masks to host two label execs who visit near the end of recording. Arguably, her evolution as a songwriter flourished because cloistered working environmen­ts were the only viable way to make music during the height of the Covid-19 crisis – and they were convenient­ly closed to label interferen­ce or the danger of a young voice being crowded out in a busy room.

She wasn’t the only songwriter benefiting from these reduced circumstan­ces: Driving Home 2 U makes an interestin­g companion piece to Charli XCX’s Alone Together, another account of creativity perseverin­g during the pandemic.

Within days of California imposing its first stay-at-home order in March 2020, Charli, a self-confessed workaholic, is coming apart. “I’m flailing, doing nothing, I just need to be preoccupie­d,” she cries, filming herself on her phone. So she sets herself the challenge of making an album within five weeks, a process that might usually take a year, calling it How I’m Feeling Now. What’s more, she intends to document every part of it to let fans feel as involved as possible: right down to holding Zoom writing sessions where she toggles between rhymebrain.com and their suggestion­s in the comments.

Charli’s fraught relationsh­ip with her label, Atlantic, over the last decade has been well documented: both parties have vacillated between whether she should be a mainstream pop star or an avant garde influencer who innovates alongside close collaborat­ors such as PC Music figurehead­s Sophie and AG Cook. Unreconcil­ed to this day (her new album Crash offers a meta take on the matter), that identity flux is presumably what made Atlantic fund this experiment­al project: it’s entirely in character, and so the risks are lower.

You wonder whether the lane Charli has carved out also helped create space for Rodrigo to work with just one producer in his home studio on her own major label debut. Not to mention, too, Beyoncé’s brains-trust process, Billie Eilish’s homespun pop – as documented in her own film, The World’s a Little Blurry – and Ariana Grande staking her claim, in 2018, to “put out

music in the way that a rapper does” – ie fast and reactive. Sour was initially meant to be an EP, but Rodrigo told her label Geffen that she was determined to make a full album to document that period of her life. Staying in touch with fresh-wound emotions requires intimacy and speed, not the type of diluting creation-by-committee process that can particular­ly dog young female pop acts who aren’t trusted with their own work.

As New York Times pop music critic Jon Caramanica has often pointed out, major stars have started behaving more like cult acts, understand­ing that doing so helps them protect their vision and speak directly to an invested audience rather than risking their distinctiv­eness by trying to please allcomers: at the same time as Rodrigo and Charli were making these records, Taylor Swift was recording a pair of surpriseal­bums at home with a coterie of left-field collaborat­ors (a process that she also documented for Disney).

These films have wildly different stakes: Rodrigo’s are more about brand positionin­g, establishi­ng distance between who she is now and who she used to be: she talks, strikingly, about playing the songs “in these places that meant so much to me and revisiting them with older eyes”, as if she were looking back in her dotage and not from a remove of about 18 months. The focus is on establishi­ng her as a born songwriter, not a “former Disney star”, and dwelling on the emotional consequenc­es of heartbreak rather than the drama she obliquely alludes to that characteri­sed much media coverage of her breakout. It’s fans-only fare, for those who already know the details.

Charli’s vérité film has more at risk: will she make her five-week deadline? What’s more, it’s her first time cohabiting with her on-off boyfriend – in seven years, they’ve never spent more than 11 days together. It also coincides with her soliciting a therapist to unpick the toxic relationsh­ip between her work and her self-worth at what couldn’t be a more acute moment.

Neverthele­ss, documentat­ion offers both artists, a decade apart in age, a form of protection: women’s agency in the studio is often still undermined, and both films leave no doubt as to Rodrigo and Charli’s authorship and role as equal collaborat­ors. We see Charli setting up equipment and learning how to self-produce as well as writing to beats sent in by the likes of Cook and Palmistry; Rodrigo ad libs to a riff that Nigro coins on a whim and comes up with one of the most beloved songs on her debut album. These appear to be entirely empowered working environmen­ts, but having a camera present in the studio also seems like it should be an industry prerequisi­te, offering a kind of security – particular­ly for young female artists working with older men – in a space that has historical­ly been open to exploitati­on.

Of the two films, Alone Together is by far the better documentar­y. Rodrigo’s is hermetical­ly stagey, and the wan interviews undermine her pride in the messy emotional truth of her songs. The closing credits show photos of her larking about with the all-female band that backs her “live” performanc­es, and it’s hard not to crave more of that sort of interactio­n: a group of girls road-tripping and bonding together, not lonely vignettes of Rodrigo in boilerplat­e landscapes. Charli’s film offers a wider time capsule of life under lockdown, particular­ly as she focuses on the experience­s of isolated LGBTQ+ fans who find inclusion in her project and fan community. But they’re both appreciabl­y devoid of any drama beyond making a creative deadline.

Since the New York Times released Framing Britney Spears in February 2021, a cottage industry has emerged for documentar­ies that “redeem” female pop cultural icons (or pariahs) of previous eras. And pop stars often turn to their own documentar­yvehicles when they’re in need of a redemption­narrative (especially when they’re managed by Scooter Braun). Refreshing­ly, neither of these films offer a greater conclusion than: I made an album. Driving Home 2 U doesn’t cure Rodrigo of her heartbreak: “Hopefully I won’t be so sad in the next record,” she tells Nigro when they finish recording. Nor does Alone Together redeem Charli of her workaholis­m: “Shall we do another one?!” she jokes to her boyfriend and manager when she’s done. Creativity alone is presented as a valid marker of personal evolution. Their triumph lies in working within self-imposed limits, not striving to escape anyone else’s.

• Driving Home 2 U is out now on Disney+, Alone Together is in cinemas on 14 April and available on demand from 18 April.

 ?? BFC/Getty ?? Charli XCX performing in November 2021. Photograph: Eamonn McCormack/
BFC/Getty Charli XCX performing in November 2021. Photograph: Eamonn McCormack/
 ?? ?? Behind the music … Charli XCX and Olivia Rodrigo. Composite: Disney, Getty
Behind the music … Charli XCX and Olivia Rodrigo. Composite: Disney, Getty

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States