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Pirates seize the airwaves with sex, drugs and rock and roll

By: Tatiana Craine, Arts Editor

Issue date: 11/6/09 Section: The Arts
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Beware. Pirates! Or perhaps, pirates beware. Radio pirates, that is.

"Pirate Radio" (perhaps better known by its British title, "The Boat that Rocked") tells the jaunty, if jumbled, tale of renegade radio DJs playing rock and pop in 1960s Britain. A somewhat rickety boat serves as the home base for Radio Rock in the ocean where they broadcast contraband music to over 20 million eager listeners across the country. At first, it seems like things are blissful, then a government official decides that more than 45 minutes of rock music per day is just too much for the British public. A battle between the rockers and the government ensues-for the next two hours of the film.

Young, bright-eyed Carl (Tom Sturridge) boards the Radio Rock boat after getting expelled from school for smoking. His godfather Quentin (Bill Nighy), takes him in with open arms and commends Carl for his reckless behavior. The youngster gets introduced to a cast of characters who are as diverse and colorful as the music pumping from their station. Men dominate the ship, with the only exception being a lesbian cook.

"Pirate Radio," directed by Richard Curtis, serves as a character-driven piece much akin to Curtis' "Love Actually." The film strings along chaotic plotlines while trying to tie the story together with montages of avid Radio Rock listeners simultaneously tuning into the station and tuning out government warnings.

Philip Seymour Hoffman delivers an outrageous, fantastic performance as The Count, an American DJ with a big mouth and a penchant for Brit girls. The Count seems reminiscent of Hoffman's journalist in "Almost Famous," except this time his character is the envy of the entire nation-not just a pseudo-Cameron Crowe youth. Bill Nighy turns in a ridiculous and wry performance that levels with Hoffman's pluckiness well. Other big names in the film include Kenneth Branagh and Jack Davenport as the conservative officials trying to shut down Radio Rock. Branagh plays the quintessential stuffy Brit while Davenport's character, though dryly funny, serves mostly as a joke. (His character's surname is Twatt. Yes, two Ts, at the end and about as much balls as the name suggests.) Emma Thompson also pops up for a cameo as Carl's mother, but she does little more than sip cognac and sparkle behind her oversized sunglasses.
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JH

posted 11/06/09 @ 12:00 PM CST

I think this sounds great. I have visited the radio Caroline ship in Essex (Ross Revenge I think) which was a pirate radio station in the UK. Sounds like a fun romp of a film to me . (Continued…)

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