The Wedding Guest

The main enjoyment of a thriller like The Wedding Guest is having no idea what’s going to happen next, one’s mind racing to fill in the board before the pieces have been even revealed. Starting with British man Jay (Dev Patel) boarding a flight from Heathrow to Lahore, before taking us on an epic journey of the Indian subcontinent, its greatest asset, at first, is the way it keeps the viewer continuously guessing. Yet when it finally settles into a fixed gear, it slowly deflates into something mechanical and predictable, dashing to pieces its initial great promise.

I’ll try to spoil as little of the plot in my review. Let’s just say that when a movie is called The Wedding Guest, perhaps the titular character isn’t exactly a friend of the bride. After his for-hire job is botched, he heads to the Indian border with a new acquaintance in tow (Radhika Apte), quickly scrabbling to make things right.

Michael Winterbottom has always been obsessed with travel. Not only has he helmed every film in Steve Coogan and Rob Brydon’s The Trip series and adapted On The Road, but he has also filmed in locations as diverse as Bosnia, Italy and Texas. The Wedding Guest follows in this wandering tradition, but the sheer size and diversity of India seems to overwhelm him. By doing too much and going too far, he can’t quite slow down and figure out why the story matters.

Here he zooms in on the bureaucratic processes of travel, depicting the ostensible dull scenes of Jay renting cars, boarding trains and buses, and checking into hotels. With ID checks constantly needed, Winterbottom tries to suggest that there’s always someone watching. At the same time, India is presented as a land of opportunity and escape, a place to get lost in and start a new life. Spanning from the paradisiacal beaches of Goa to the ramshackle streets of Delhi, it’s a vicarious travelogue through the world’s seventh largest nation. With a better screenplay, this contrast between restriction and escape, bureaucracy and freedom may have pushed the characters to exciting heights, yet once the initial set up is over, The Wedding Guest runs out of interesting places to go.

There is never any real sense that the walls are closing in, both characters easily able to sojourn around the country with little to no possibility of actually getting caught. While it neatly advertises, especially through its sweeping landscape shots, India as a great place to be a fugitive, this hardly makes for a truly gripping thriller. The landscape simply destroys the story; the lusher the scenery becomes, the duller the story gets.

This lack of narrative tension may have been compensated by some sparkly romance, yet you can’t just dump two handsome leads in a five-star hotel pool and hope for the best: there has to be a reason why they become attracted to each other. Lacking this central hook, The Wedding Guest feels weightless — lacking that extra level of sophistication to really elevate it into something special.

Still, its hard to play for-hire enigmas in the grand tradition of Le Samourai (Jean-Pierre Melville, 1967), The Transporter (Louis Leterrier/ Corey Yuen, 2002) and The American (Anton Corbijn, 2011). Show too much emotion and the spell is lost, but show too little and the audience is given little reason to care. Dev Patel does a good job of emoting through body language and facial gestures alone, allowing us to get some sense of who this guy is despite his otherwise gruff tone and curt speech patterns, but there’s only so much he can do after the blindingly exciting first act gives way to bog-standard thriller clichés. It’s almost as if he’s auditioning for a better role than this. Let’s hope, unlike Winterbottom, he actually finds what he’s looking for.

The Wedding Guest is in cinemas across the UK on Friday, July 19th. On VoD the following Monday.

On the Road

The Lancashire director of the music films 24 Hour Party People (2002) and Nine Songs (2004) returns to one of the themes for which is most acclaimed for: British indie and rock. This time his subject is the North London band Wolf Alice. All very familiar territory for Michael Winterbottom. What could possibly go wrong? A lot, in reality. On the Road is guaranteed to get positive reviews in many of the specialised media, but in reality it is rather mediocre.

Winterbottom does succeed to capture the intimacy and relaxed moments of the band and crew as they tour of the UK. There is plenty of tender backstage interaction and friendly banter. There are also intimate moments in bed, but these are staged by actors who blend seamlessly into the story – these are the most profound and touching scenes of the movie, and they may remind you of Nine Songs. But that’s about it. The film feels extremely long at 121 minutes, and unless you are a die-hard fan you will probably get very bored. It’s almost as if the director felt lazy and switched off his creativity. He’s extremely prolific, often making more than one a film a year, which may explain why he doesn’t always succeed to come up with a masterpiece.

Wolf Alice is not the problem. The band is indeed very young: they formed in 2011 and only became more widely noticed a couple of years ago. They are all in their 20s. But they are not without talent and depth. The distorted riffs are easily blended with the screechy vocals, with a vaguely ethereal feel in the background. They reminded a little of the American alternative rock band The Breeders, whom I adore.

The problem is that the film banalises their tour rather than celebrates it. There is no contextualisation whatsoever (except for the intertitles with the names of the cities), no storyline, no narrative, no character development. You don’t even get a feel for the cities they are visiting, and instead it feels like they are in the same place during the two hours of the doc. The film is just a collage of images of a tour, and the coach is the binding agent. It feels distant and gloomy.

The imagery is dark and cold, and the teal-hued spotlights render the action a bit ghostly. This is by no means ugly, just not engaging enough. It will be extremely difficult to make out the details on a television screen, so if you are keen to see this movie make sure you go to the cinema. Sadly this film is unlikely to convert new fans. Unless you are a big admirer, it will not make u get up and dance. Says someone who likes indie rock a lot.

On the Road is out in cinemas across the UK on Friday, October 5th.