The Eddy Review : Great Jazz Music Show Derailed By Too Much Plots (Rating: **1/2)

Film: The Eddy

Starring: André Holland, Joanna Kulig, Amandla Stenberg, Leïla Bekhti, Tahar Rahim, Benjamin Biolay, Adil Dehbi, Melissa George, Lada Obradovic, Tchéky Karyo, Randy Kerber, Elyes Aguis, Damian Nueva Cortes

Director: Damien Chazelle, Houda Benyamina, Laïla Marrakchi, Alan Poul

Rating: **1/2

Reviewer: George Sylex

Overview - Shockingly The Eddy is more Whiplash than La Land, and relying upon your inclination on Chazelle's past flicks will most likely impact your assessments of the new series. A melodic dramatizations set in Paris which records a band in a battling jazz club with La Land's Damien Chazelle on board as lead creator and executive; you surely get a really unmistakable impression of how Netflix's most recent show is going to play out.

My Review - The eight part Netflix series follows producer and club proprietor Elliot Udo (André Holland) as he explores attempting to accommodate with his alienated little girl (Amandla Stenberg) while keeping his battling club 'The Eddy' above water and dealing with the house band. At the point, when catastrophe strikes, Elliot ends up trapped with the city's criminal underbelly and the nearby police with the club at the focal point of occasions. On paper, The Eddy winds up being a horde dramatization, with viciousness, drugs, money and disloyalty.

The series is certainly not what I expected in the wake of perusing the outline, as Chazelle and co genuinely undercut your desires for both the focal story and the city. Chazelle coordinates the initial two episodes of The Eddy and the characteristic musicality of his tasteful is an incredible snare. This isn't the standard Paris we know from the movies; gone are the exemplary bistros, and sweepingly sentimental shots of the Seine and Eiffel Tower, supplanted with close shots in modest condos and excited exhibitions in run down clubs.

The Netflix series was propelled by a lot of jazz melodies from Glen Ballard, the six-time Grammy winner, who collaborated with Six Feet Under's Alan Poul. What was conceived from the coordinated effort unquestionably isn't your average Parisian jazz group, yet something unmistakably progressively coarse and exaggerated. The underlying plot encompassing the band and the jazz club wanders into different strings; incorporating a family drama with a crime thriller subplot that is continually prowling. This unquestionably isn't a simple watch; its sensational and sometimes dark, managing overwhelming subjects as every scene centers around specific characters who are, it's sheltered to state, chaotic situations. But where the show really sparkles anyway is in the melodic intervals, especially in the club exhibitions which prove an invitation alleviation.

Keeping many plot strings together is the superb André Holland as Elliot; who, obviously battling with the bar, the band and his own connections, settles on some really disappointing choices. However, in the tranquil minutes when he begins playing the piano, or at last chatting with on off sweetheart, Maja (Joanna Kulig), the consistent nervousness seems to blur. Different heroes join Amandla Stenberg as Elliot's exceptional and defiant little girl Julie, who is pondering her character, and Joanna Kulig as the tangled vocalist Maja.

My Final Word - Flaunting a brilliantly skilled melodic cast and wonderful cinematography, The Eddy should hit quite a few notes; Yet, the steady smooth nature, and the cumbersome shuffling of various plot strings brings about a series that lamentably comes up short.

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About GeorgeSylex

Film Critic, Writer, Reviewer, Columnist

Summary
Review Date
Reviewed Item
The Eddy
Author Rating
3
Title
The Eddy
Description
Shockingly The Eddy is more Whiplash than La Land, and relying upon your inclination on Chazelle's past flicks will most likely impact your assessments of the new series. A melodic dramatizations set in Paris which records a band in a battling jazz club with La Land's Damien Chazelle on board as lead creator and executive; you surely get a really unmistakable impression of how Netflix's most recent show is going to play out.
Upload Date
May 8, 2020
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