
Thereâs a poignant and hilarious scene about a third of the way through Bohemian Rhapsody when pull-quotes from early reviews of Queen's titular 1975 single flash across a black screen. Melody Maker called âBohemian Rhapsodyâ a âsuperficially impressive pastiche of incongruous musical styles.â Other publications were much crueler.
This scene is central to Bohemian Rhapsodyâs thesis. (And it speaks to the futility of music criticism.) A toothy, self-conscious kid of Parsi descent who struggled with his sexuality into adulthood, Freddie Mercuryâborn Farrokh Bulsaraâwas rockâs ultimate and original underdog. The world never fully understood him, and if Bohemian Rhapsody is to be believed, Mercury never fully understood himself, either.
When Bohemian Rhapsody focuses on Freddie Mercuryâas it damn well shouldâit soars. Mr. Robot's Rami Malek nails both Mercuryâs flamboyant stage persona and his off-stage idiosyncrasies, which is no small accomplishment.
When Bohemian Rhapsody focuses on Freddie Mercuryâas it damn well shouldâit soars.
The film also tackles Mercuryâs sexuality and familyâtwo of the juiciest and most delicate aspects of the late musicianâs personal lifeâwith a surprising amount of respect and nuance. Early trailers for Bohemian Rhapsody disingenuously placed Mercuryâs relationship with girlfriend-turned-BFF Mary Austin (Lucy Boynton) in a wholly heterosexual light. The film, thankfully, does not commit that same transgression. Mercuryâs coming out to Austin halfway through the filmâa scene based on a real exchangeâis one of the film's most cathartic moments.
But the movie's greatest moment occurs earlier, when, at a birthday party, Mercuryâs silently conservative family pass his baby photos around the table. Mortified, he leaves the table and walks over to a piano, proudly rechristening himself âFreddie Mercury.â Itâs a moving encapsulation of the singerâs glorious self-reinvention.
But when director Bryan Singer zooms out to include the rest of Queen, Bohemian Rhapsody falls victim to the clichĂ©s that encumber every rock doc and biopic. Some of this is inevitable: Band origin stories are boring to watch because theyâre inherently boring. No amount of unique personalities can make a meeting with a record label executive seem fun.
Still, you canât help but feel like some of this âfiller contentââsuch as a scene where Queen guitarist Brian May (Gwilym Lee) teaches the band, sans Mercury, the stomp-clap pattern for âWe Will Rock Youââwas included at the behest of the surviving band members. This is further hinted at during a scene where a pill-addled Mercury gives his obligatory âYouâd be nothing without me!â declaration to the band. Mercury comes crawling back, of course, and the subtext is that Mercury was just a single part of a much larger machine. But even if the band believes this, itâs a ludicrous proposition. Without Freddie Mercury, there would be no Queen, and there certainly wouldnât be a Bohemian Rhapsody.