This review may contain spoilers!
Power Ballad follows Rick, a singer for a wedding band, whose path crosses with a former boy band member, Danny Wilson. After performing together, the pair start jamming together over an evening, and Danny winds up stealing a song Rick has written. The rest of the film is Rick's efforts to get Danny to admit the original author of the song.
This is the sort of movie that if you bear with, you will really be rewarded. When I started with Power Ballad, I thought this might be a comedy about older musicians grumbling about the good old days. But the character of Rick is a great way, a very authentic figure who is entirely passionate about music, but more importantly, he loves his wife and daughter completely. This is someone who chose love in his life over the ambition of music a couple of times. When he collides with Danny Wilson, you get this electric performance that really highlights how impressive our two leads are. They both want different things; Rick feels the lost potential of his life from his label dropping him, while Danny is stressed from the pressure of trying to produce a hit that will enable him to keep the lifestyle he has achieved. When the pair separate, we see Danny's desperation at realising his music isn't taking off. He takes Rick's song, and we follow an incredulous and distraught Rick, who cannot reconcile that the young man he met would take this action against him. Rick's manic obsession sends him into a spiral, which he eventually turns into confrontation. Watching Rick and Sandy embark on a caper to LA to confront Danny is a real moment of hilarity in this feature. Power Ballad often succeeds at being quite witty out of circumstance, landing some very fun sequences. The climactic moment of the film, in which Rick finally confronts Danny, is a powerful piece of acting; these are two people in a deeply flawed situation. Danny knows how wretched his choice is, but can't let go of the decision he has made. Rick, however, hasn't confronted Danny to extort money from him. He simply tells Danny the true meaning of his song, that it's not a romantic song but a dedication to his feelings about his daughter. It flips how you see this film; it's about finding the heart of the song and holding it true. I loved the emotional connection we come to understand about the song, something that is only empowered by the way Rick's daughter believes in him and even discovers the original recording of the song. By the end of the film, we see that Rick has accepted the outcome of the song dispute; he plays it with sincerity and true meaning, while Danny never finds a moment of authenticity. Danny chooses to perform knowing that there is a falsehood at the centre of his performance. It's a really beautiful film about where true musical art comes from and the corrupting influence of fame and wealth.
I cannot stress just how incredible the soundtrack for this feature is. Rudd performs most of the soundtrack, and it is a real display of talent. He and the band cover a range of hits that really evoke the sort of band that you would dish out good money for. Yet, those moments in which Rudd and Jonas collide are something. 'I Wish' is a particularly key turning point in the feature. However, it is all renditions of 'How To Write A Song Without You' that really blew me away. Rudd's final performance of that track is the beating heart of Power Ballad. I could hear him sing it over and over again.
Peter McDonald, who played Sandy, is a real high point of comedy across the film; Rudd and McDonald's unconventional friendship is a key point of levity. Beth Fallon, who played Aja, has some fun moments of playing the cantankerous teen; yet it's the moments she connected with her onscreen Dad that really raised the film up. Marcella Plunkett, who played Rachel, has some really decent chemistry with Rudd; the pair seem completely head over heels for one another. Nick Jonas, who played Danny Wilson, is a very charismatic and likeable figure at first; but I loved how Jonas played the moral desperation his character excuses his actions upon. Jack Reynor, who played Mac, is quite a simple approach to the major music manager; his more cutthroat manner as things went along added a decent conflict.
However, the best performance came from Paul Rudd, who played Rick. This is a guy who really still believes in the craft of music; he likes to gripe over new music while declaring his love for the highs of the 70s and 80s. Rudd's ability to actually throw himself into performance here is a nice treat; he really shows a lot of talent with the musical performances. He is someone who can really embody an everyman vibe, you see the easy nature he walks down a street and connects with others in a way you can relate to. Rudd also lends himself nicely to the moments of humour; he's a bit of a veteran there. The way Rick descends into obsessive fixation over proving the song is his is a good moment of conflict. But it is the way Rudd presents the love his character feels that won me over. This is a character who loves his wife and daughter more than anything; he chooses them over his music at every turn. Paul Rudd will tug on your heartstrings here and gives an absolutely inspired performance.
I wasn't sure about Power Ballad when the feature first started. The first act is full of older men trotting around gigs and bemoaning the state of modern music. It felt a bit hazy and out of touch. There were also moments in the film where the dialogue was clunky and the jokes pretty overt. Reynor and Jonas navigating a Trump joke in this film was one of the more ham-fisted moments, regardless of which side of the political aisle you fall upon.
This isn't always the nicest-looking film; it struggles to remain lit well, and the shots aren't always the most interesting. This is a feature that just holds what it needs to in frame and doesn't move for style very often. The editing also lends itself to a slow pace and has some awkward instances of cutting between shots.
Rory Keenan, who played Binzer, is a gruff point of conflict that the film doesn't really need; Keenan's hard edge and threats of removal from the band get a bit worn out. Havana Rose Liu, who played Marcia, really doesn't have a lot of substance to her role; there should've been more interplay between her and Jonas.
Sometimes it's not about who wrote the song. Sometimes it's just why the song was written. I would give Power Ballad a 9/10.






