Review: ‘Brand: A Second Coming’ tracks comic’s rebirth
Director Ondi Timoner is convinced, however, of something magnetically transformative in Brand’s efforts to trade self-destructive rock-star narcissism for the kind of greatness that drove Russell Brand’s political heroes.
- Share via
When anarchic British comedian Russell Brand crawled out of a syringe and into a prophet’s robes to become a self-professed agent for spiritual and cultural revolution (with jokes), the reaction was a mixture of “Huh?” and “Cool” and “Wasn’t he married to Katy Perry?”
Director Ondi Timoner is convinced, however, of something magnetically transformative in Brand’s efforts to trade self-destructive rock-star narcissism for the kind of greatness that drove Brand’s political heroes — Gandhi, Malcolm X and Jesus, among others. Her movie “Brand: A Second Coming,” which arose out of a project he asked Timoner to work on, traces the merry/mad prankster’s roots in lower-middle-class England, early dreams of fame, chaotic dealings with said stardom, and eventual post-rehab epiphany that he could use his bristling intelligence, foul-mouthed wit and public notoriety to change a broken world.
SIGN UP for the free Indie Focus movies newsletter >>
But is what he wants (government overthrow, a new era of selfless giving) possible and realistic? Or will he just be the funny guy at a GQ event who calls out Hugo Boss for clothing Nazis and the comedian who runs roughshod over TV interviewers?
Timoner is ultimately too enamored of pumped-up montages and proximity to Brand’s motormouth virtuosity to make her film much more than a youth-centered rallying cry. Whether you agree with his system-damning rhetoric or see him as no better than anyone else in our clogged punditocracy, “Brand: A Second Coming” is, if not a careful portrait, at least an orgy of personality.
------------
“Brand: A Second Coming”
MPAA rating: None.
Running time: 1 hour, 46 minutes.
Playing: ArcLight Hollywood.
More to Read
Only good movies
Get the Indie Focus newsletter, Mark Olsen's weekly guide to the world of cinema.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.