As far as the genre of musical biopics is concerned, the newest addition to the cannon – Kneecap – is a welcome and entertaining look at an unlikely trio of men who form an Irish hip hop act.
After Belfast schoolteacher JJ (DJ Próvai) gets it into his head that two boys from the neighborhood – Naoise (Móglaí Bap) and Liam Óg (Mo Chara) – might have the chops to make it as a hip hop act, he offers to produce a few tracks for them. Along the way, he become as integral to the group – newly christened Kneecap – as are Naoise and Liam Óg. The act quickly becomes the unlikely mouthpiece of the Civil Rights movement currently engaged in preserving the Irish language from absorption into English. Like any other original defiant voice, the group is looked upon as a menace to law and order, but the band remains steadfast in their message of the importance of cultural heritage and defiance of censorship.
Director Rich Peppiatt, makes his feature debut working from a script penned by himself and the three members of the band – Mo Chara, Móglaí Bap, and DJ Próvai. What is refreshing though is how likable the bandmates are portrayed as they develop their professional presence and style. When DJ Próvai dons a ski mask adorned with the colors of the Irish flag, it plays like a pivotal moment in the evolution of the group, rather than a simple “hide your identity” moment. Credit for this goes to Peppiatt who treats these instances like seminal events in the group’s history (as they are) and manages to convey as much to the audience through the editing of Chris Fill and Julian Ulrichs as well as the music provided by Michael “Mikey J” Assante.
Portraying themselves, the members of Kneecap (again – Mo Chara, Móglaí Bap, and DJ Próvai), all deliver solid performances and they too succeed in winning the audience over to their side of the story. Supporting performances from Michael Fassbender as one of the boy’s estranged father, Simone Kirby as his wife, and Josie Walker as a detective trying to apprehend the father – who is also an enemy of the government – are all delivered with equal bravado and nuance that makes for a well-realized cast of characters instead of a hodge-podge of half-interesting ones alongside others that are better drawn.
Although the oeuvre of successful biopics centered on musical acts – especially those in the hip hop genre – is a relatively small one, Kneecap somehow manages to pull out all the stops and deliver on multiple narrative (and musical) levels to deliver a wonderfully entertaining story of how three friends overcame the odds to create something important and perhaps everlasting.
Mike Tyrkus
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