Dir/Jack Bond | 86′ Biopic Drama
Jack Bond throws every English icon into this absurdist outing. It sees the Pet Shop Boys’ Neil Tennant dolled up In evening garb and ready to party, rather soberly, alongside his partner in crime Chris Lowe (rocking a beanie and leather jacket). The two fetch up in the English seaside resort of Clacton where they befriend a bonkers blind priest (Joss Acland); a camp Gareth Hunt; nuns in drag; a ventriloquist’s dummy and marauding school boys for an existential day that spills into a neon night.
Scored by the ‘Boys’ legendary classics, one of the best scenes features Lowe in a biplane soaring over the English countryside in Summer, Tennant riding below in an old Humber banger complete with a bunch of dice. At a funfair pervy bovver boys threaten to queer the pitch as they whizz by on a big wheel. Tennant finally returns his mother’s call (an unlikely Barbara Windsor in curlers and psychedelic lipstick). Zeebras, cows and snakes roam through the Victorian station of Horsted Keynes where a train is – naturally – derailed.
If you’re an avid fan of Jack Bond’s fare this nostalgic trip to those glory days will have you singing from the rafters – but it’s a kitsch bridge too far for most audiences, feeling very dated in its 1980s ponceyness. MT
NOW ON BFI BLURAY | JACK BOND 1937-2024