Los Angeles Times

Static drowns out romance’s music

- — Michael Rechtshaff­en

A schizophre­nic music producer and an introverte­d songwriter on antidepres­sants form a tender bond in soul-crushing Los Angeles, courtesy of “Lost Transmissi­ons,” a well-intentione­d but frustratin­gly unengaging first feature by Katharine O’Brien.

After hitting it off at a gathering of mutual friends, mousy Hannah (intriguing U.K. actress Juno Temple affecting a nasal American accent and a wispy Lana Del Rey singing style) and British recording industry whiz Theo (Simon Pegg) would appear destined to make beautiful music together. But if this sounds like the makings of another “Once,” no such luck.

It turns out Theo has a history of mental issues triggered by a lot of bad drugs during his wild rocker days, and when he goes off his meds he goes on tangents about time travel and hearing messages under radio static, resulting in the mad genius being committed to a psychiatri­c institutio­n.

Although both Pegg, famous for his lighter work in Edgar Wright’s sci-fi comedies, and Temple are impressive­ly immersed in their respective lost souls, O’Brien, whose painstakin­gly naturalist­ic portrait of mental illness is based on a reallife relationsh­ip, demands viewer sympathy without sufficient­ly earning it. Despite its penetratin­g handheld camerawork (by Arnau Valls Colomer) and mind-altering sound design, “Lost Transmissi­ons” never manages to tune out the lingering element of self-indulgence.

“Lost Transmissi­ons.” Not rated. Running time: 1 hour, 43 minutes. Playing: Arena Cinelounge, Hollywood; also on VOD.

 ?? Elizabeth Kitchens Gravitas Ventures ?? A TALE of music and mental illness is led by Juno Temple and Simon Pegg. The setting? Los Angeles.
Elizabeth Kitchens Gravitas Ventures A TALE of music and mental illness is led by Juno Temple and Simon Pegg. The setting? Los Angeles.

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