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    Movie Review

    Sweet and bittersweet Dreamin' Wild brings forgotten music back to life

    Alex Bentley
    Aug 7, 2023 | 9:50 am

    As with all aspects of the entertainment industry, the music landscape is littered with the shattered dreams of thousands of singers who never quite made it. The difference between one person succeeding and another failing can be minute, as there are innumerable lucky factors like timing, location, and more that play a part in aspiring artists being heard at all.

    Dreamin’ Wild is the true story of two never-weres who somehow got a second chance. In the film, we meet Donnie (Casey Affleck) and Joe Emerson (Walton Goggins) in 2011, 32 years after they put out their one-and-only album, Dreamin’ Wild. Matt Sullivan (Chris Messina), who works for a small music label that specializes in boosting forgotten projects, approaches them out of the blue to let them know that, against the odds, the album has found a new generation of fans.

    As Donnie, Joe, and their family grapple with the prospect of the duo restarting a music career, the film alternates the current timeline with flashbacks to 1979, watching the younger Donnie (Noah Jupe) and Joe (Jack Dylan Grazer) make the album. In both timelines, Donnie is serious and meticulous, while Joe is just happy to be spending time with his brother and having fun making music.

    Written and directed by Bill Pohlad, the film is both sweet and bittersweet. When you hear songs like “Baby,” “Dream Full of Dreams,” and “Good Time,” they feel like classics that have been played on the radio forever. But in reality, the album barely made it outside of their hometown of Fruitland, Washington, with Donnie settling into a life running a music studio and playing in a band-for-hire in nearby Spokane with wife Nancy (Zooey Deschanel).

    Pohlad does a fantastic job contrasting the attitudes of Donnie and Joe as they re-enter a world they thought they had left behind. He creates a slow build, with Donnie’s dourness and Joe’s enthusiasm making for fascinating insights into both brothers’ lives. Through both the adult and younger scenes, we really get to know what makes each of them tick, and the way Pohlad plays it so that they exist as humans instead of caricatures gives the story extra depth.

    Although the film surely embellishes certain parts of the brothers’ story, the remarkable thing about it is how true to life it feels. Pohlad is not trying to sell some pie-in-the-sky version of events; real life is much more complicated and he makes sure to show the good, the bad, and the ugly of how the sudden shift affected their lives.

    Special credit should go to the casting department. Even though Affleck & Jupe and Goggins & Grazer don’t especially look like each other, both pairs give spookily similar performances so that you truly believe they are playing the same people. Also great is Beau Bridges as their father, a role that could have been thankless and forgettable, but winds up being the heart of the film.

    There’s nothing flashy about Dreamin’ Wild, and that’s what makes it so compelling. Almost everyone can relate to a dream dashed or deferred, and the empathetic and honest way with which this film deals with the reality of one such situation makes for a great watch.

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    Dreamin' Wild is now playing in theaters.

    Noah Jupe and Jack Dylan Grazer in Dreamin' Wild

    Photo courtesy of Roadside Attractions

    Noah Jupe and Jack Dylan Grazer in Dreamin' Wild.

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    Movie review

    Nick Jonas and Paul Rudd chase their dreams in music-heavy Power Ballad

    Alex Bentley
    Jun 8, 2026 | 10:30 am
    Nick Jonas and Paul Rudd in Power Ballad
    Photo by David Cleary for Lionsgate
    Nick Jonas and Paul Rudd in Power Ballad.

    Writer/director John Carney is one of the great purveyors of movies featuring music (as opposed to musicals) in the 21st century. Starting with Once in 2007 (which was turned into a Broadway musical several years later), he has made music-themed stories like Begin Again, Sing Street, Flora and Son, and now Power Ballad.

    Rick Power (Paul Rudd) is a former wannabe rock star who is now the lead singer of “Ireland’s #1 Wedding Band,” The Bride & Grooves. While they mostly play smaller weddings, a gig at a country estate leads to an encounter with Danny Wilson (Nick Jonas), a former boy band member struggling to make it as a solo artist. Rick and Danny wind up bonding in a booze- and pot-filled jam session, sharing various song ideas.

    After returning to Los Angeles and desperate for a hit, Danny steals one of Rick’s songs, which miraculously turns into the No. 1 “How to Write a Song (Without You).” Rick, initially overjoyed that something he wrote has become big, is crushed when he finds out Danny didn’t give him credit. His quest to find a way to prove his worth sends him into a spiral, upending the ordinary life he had built.

    Co-written by Peter McDonald, the film is a nice exploration of two men trying to hold on to their music dreams. Their individual circumstances could not be more different, but each of them knows the ups and downs of the business as well as the other, as well as the ineffable magic of creating that one great song. While the music scenes are hit-and-miss because of a reliance on lip synching, the scene featuring Rick and Danny trading ideas is electric with creativity.

    Oddly, though, the film could have used a bit less music and more of a focus on the two men’s personal lives. Rick wound up living in Ireland after falling in love with his future wife, Rachel (Marcella Plunkett), while on tour with his former American band. He spends a decent amount of time with her and his daughter, Aja (Beth Fallon), but his story needed a few more family scenes to drive the point home. Danny’s personal life is all but nonexistent, giving his arc less impact than it could have had.

    Instead of loved ones, Carney and McDonald try to give Rick and Danny more depth through friends and business associates. Rick’s bandmate Sandy (McDonald) is a ride-or-die kind of guy for him, but his presence is only good for a few humorous distractions. Danny’s manager Mac (Jack Reynor) is difficult to parse, as he goes to bat for Danny on multiple occasions, but also seems to keep him at arm’s length.

    It’s long been joked that Rudd never ages, and that youthfulness serves him well in this role, in which his character is supposed to be much younger than his actual age of 57. His energy and enthusiasm make his character appealing throughout, even when Rick starts to go off the deep end. Jonas is decent in his role, selling the music side well, but there might be a reason his character doesn’t have many scenes requiring him to show emotions.

    While Power Ballad has all the hallmarks of another great Carney music movie, it’s missing a few pieces that could have put it over the top. It’s still a fun film with an insanely catchy song at its center, but it’s not quite as memorable as most of the filmmaker’s previous efforts.

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    Power Ballad is now playing in theaters.

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