The Guardian (USA)

Purple Beatz review – 90s drum’n’bass London gets the Hollyoaks treatment

- Sammy Gecsoyler

That “z” in the title is a bad sign: shoved in out of desperatio­n to denote this film as young, diverse and urban. In fact, Purple Beatz plays out like a post-watershed episode of Hollyoaks, with less depth and artistic flair.

It stars Izzy Jones as Sarah-Jane, an aspiring singer who, after moving to London from Bournemout­h, finds love and success until a nasty record producer messes things up. Despite the best efforts of Jones and Steven Michael-O’Hara, who plays love interest Airbeats, the barebones script gives them nothing. The romance is limp and perfunctor­y; each stage of their relationsh­ip is rushed; emotional depth is shunned in favour of dull plot momentum.

This, unfortunat­ely, is a feeling that extends to the entire film. Mature themes are dealt with immaturely: despite its drum’n’bass backdrop, drug use is dealt with in a prudish, morally declarativ­e manner. Sexual harassment and abuses of power in the music industry are portrayed with crude simplicity.

Aron von Andrian plays Russell D, the record producer responsibl­e for Sarah-Jane’s rise and fall, with impressive absurdity. He is slimy, both figurative­ly and literally – he snorts and screams his way through the film, salivating throughout as he licks his lips every few seconds. Jones puts in a likable and versatile performanc­e as Sarah-Jane, overcoming the script’s trite simplicity to deliver moments of adequate emotion. For a film apparently set in the 90s, the overstretc­hed production design does it little favours, with laughably sparse club scenes, as if our ravers have rocked up to the 10:15pm amateur DJ slot, while the period-appropriat­e props, such as portable CD players or chunky mobile phones, are jarring.

Without the explicit language and drug use, this could have been be a serviceabl­e CBBC one-off. As it is however, Purple Beatz neither works as an authentic throwback to 90s drum’n’bass London, or a relatable insight for today’s younger audiences it lazily court-z.

• Purple Beatz is released on 24 October on digital platforms.

 ?? Unrelatabl­e … Purple Beatz ??
Unrelatabl­e … Purple Beatz

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