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They once thought playing Coachella was 'unattainable' and 'legendary.' Now these SoCal musicians prepare to take its stage

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They once thought playing Coachella was 'unattainable' and 'legendary.' Now these SoCal musicians prepare to take its stage

In many ways, Southern California is a breeding ground for aspiring musicians. It could be because of the region’s proximity to Hollywood and major recording labels. Or maybe there really is something in the water.

Either way, it’s where artists like the Red Hot Chili Peppers first became acquainted at Fairfax High School. It’s where N.W.A helped put Compton on hip-hop’s radar, paving the way for King Kunta himself, Kendrick Lamar. No Doubt, fronted by Gwen Stefani, came to fruition inside an Orange County Dairy Queen. Billie Eilish started singing with her brother Finneas inside their Highland Park home. And the list continues on.

Every April, the Coachella Valley Music and Arts Festival brings global talent to crowds of nearly 250,000. Performing across two consecutive weekends, people in their finest festival wear gather to dance in the open field, hold their barricade spot secure for the night’s headliner and possibly discover their next musical fixation. Though Coachella is a worldwide phenomenon, the lineup tends to spotlight a few local artists every year.

The Times spoke with Southern California natives — rappers Shoreline Mafia, electro-punk duo Kumo 99, nu-gaze trio Julie and garage rockers Together Pangea — about how they are gearing up for the three-day desert festival.

Kumo 99 is fulfilling their ’cool kid’ dreams

Ami Komai, one-half of electronic-punk duo Kumo 99, once thought of Coachella as “somewhere all the cool kids hung out.” Growing up between San Pedro and Silver Lake, the singer’s mother never let her attend the festival during her adolescence. But now, alongside bandmate Nate Donmoyer, Kumo 99 won’t only be a part of the crowd — they’ll be on stage.

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“It’s such a big festival that it felt unattainable. It’s far away and picturesque. It seems like a different universe. I used to go to shows in parking lots and those kinds of festivals. I can’t picture what it would be like on a golf course with these huge gleaming stages,” said Donmoyer. “It always looked like fun.”

Kumo 99, formed in 2020, brings the essence of a hardcore track to the sounds of an experimental rave. Komai handles the vocals, often singing in Japanese, and Donmoyer heads their fast-paced breakbeats and pulsating drums. Heard on the fan-favorite “Four Point Steel Star,” the duo shapes a grungy, futuristic soundscape. The 2022 release hones in on an industrial-sounding synth, marked with sporadic, sci-fi sounds all while Komai energetically shouts in the background. They say the sounds of their respective upbringings often affect their music, sometimes without even being conscious of it — naming L.A.’s specific cadence as unintentional inspiration.

“San Pedro has such an expansive musical history and I was lucky enough where like my heroes still lived there when I was growing up,” said Komai. She cites Mike Watt from Minutemen and Black Flag’s Keith Morris as local legends. “They’re super funny and super grumpy. Everything I liked was so hyper-local, so I didn’t realize until much later in life how lucky I was to grow up where I did.”

Donmoyer, who grew up in Washington D.C., says his neighborhood was of a similar environment. He fondly remembers “every rec center function playing, live board recordings on CD-Rs of backyard and junkyard bands.”

In addition to performing at the festival, they want to catch sets from the Prodigy and Blonde Redhead. But most of all, they are hoping to get driven around in a golf cart.

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“Sometimes playing a festival really feels like a traveling circus act. It has the ‘coming into town’ kind of feeling. Or even like attending a giant summer camp where you get to see a bunch of your friends that you haven’t seen in a while,” said Komai.

Shoreline Mafia

(Austin Simkins)

Freshly reunited, Shoreline Mafia is holding out for history

Shoreline Mafia is back and they’re planning to make headlines with their Coachella performance. The rambunctious East Hollywood rap group were key members of L.A.’s rap scene in the late 2010s. With party hits like the earworm “Musty” and “Nun Major’s” subtle flex, they helped popularize a new spin of West Coast rap with danceable trap beats. But after several mixtapes and a studio album, the four rappers went their separate ways in 2020.

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Then 2024’s “Heat Stick” hit radio airwaves under the Shoreline Mafia name. Backed by an eerie beat, the track revisits their promiscuous, party lifestyle with hedonistic lyricism. Powered by OhGeesy and Fenix Flexin, this new era of Shoreline Mafia is marked by the two original members continuing what they started back in 2016.

“We got a chance to grow up, and find out a lot about ourselves. We figured out how to work alone, and that makes us better together,” said Fenix Flexin of their time spent apart. “When we get the studio together now, it’s like clockwork. Both of us are so refined and coming together to do music makes it 10 times easier.”

They say their new sound feels “different, but the same,” pointing out an “updated beat game and elevated rhyme schemes.” OhGeesy credits this change to a new sense of maturity. Eager to see how their new music translates to live shows, the duo considers their upcoming Coachella performance as a chance to make history.

“I’ve never been to Coachella before. It’s my first time even attending the festival. So to be attending as a performer is a blessing,” said OhGeesy. “Everybody always loves Coachella. It’s legendary and everybody has always has their eyes on it. Tickets are super expensive and it’s this upper echelon festival. So, for us to be right there is crazy.”

Fenix Flexin added, “I have high expectations and high hopes for the show in general, just because it’s been a long time since we’ve performed a new show and put out an album. It has to be one of the best performances we’ve ever given in our lives.”

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Beyond bringing their high energy levels and rowdy sounds to the desert, they see their set as a way to honor their city and cement Shoreline Mafia as a staple in L.A. hip-hop.

“We take inspiration from every single scene in the city. We grew up hanging out with gang bangers, skaters, punk rockers and graffiti artists. We soaked a little bit of everything in it, for sure,” said OhGeesy. “L.A. is where everything came to fruition for us. We built a bond and everything else was built to follow.”

Together Pangea

Together Pangea

(Kelsey Reckling)

Born out of Santa Clarita, Together Pangea is more than ready for Indio

When Together Pangea’s bassist Danny Bengston thinks of Coachella, he’s transported to a Ticketmaster inside a JC Penney. It was where his mother first bought him a ticket in 2005. That year, Coldplay and Nine Inch Nails were headlining and he remembers being most excited to see the Locusts.

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“I was a kid. I was, at most, 16 years old and it ended up being a pretty formative experience,” said Bengston. “For me, on some level, it was a realization that I wanted to play music, and one day I wanted to play [Coachella].”

Together Pangea, made of Bengston, vocalist/guitarist William Keegan and drummer Erik Jimenez, have been a band since 2008, but they admit they didn’t start taking it seriously until 2013. Describing Cal Arts as their “incubator,” the musicians credit Santa Clarita’s DIY, underground punk scene with giving them an entry point into music.

“When you grow up in a place like Santa Clarita, that’s a conservative suburb, there’s not really any place to play. Los Angeles is a 45-minute drive away and you are forced to figure out how to play shows and build your own community and space with what you have. It also makes you work a little harder,” said Keegan.

After leaving their “conservative suburb,” they settled into Los Angeles and immediately found new musical hubs — starting at different art galleries and parties until transitioning to downtown’s the Smell and Echo Park’s the Echo. During this period, they say they were able to find their organic sound. With nearly two decades together as a band, these garage surf rockers bring a West Coast twang to their DIY, punk roots. Their sonic range can go anywhere from mellow, feel-good acoustics to strained vocals over hard-hitting electric guitar riffs.

The trio plans to treat their Coachella set like a normal show but says they are happy to get the opportunity at this point of their career when they are “a little bit older and can appreciate it more.”

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“At festivals like this, you get the opportunity to have a wider audience and have a bigger figurative and literal stage,” said Bengston. “The only thing is that there’s a little timer at the edge of the stage, that you don’t have when you’re playing your own [headline] show. So you have to make sure you’re not [messing] around too much.”

Julie

Julie

(Jaxon Whittington)

Julie plans to ‘play hard’ and keep it simple

At one point, Julie, a shoegaze band from Orange County, was “really afraid” of playing music festivals. The fast-paced nature of a short daytime set has its challenges, but drummer Dillon Lee shared they were able to overcome their fears through “exposure therapy.”

“Festival sets now feel like a mini-game. You have no time to think and you go on stage, you play really fast — it’s awesome — and then you run off,” explained bassist and vocalist Alexandria Elizabeth.

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The trio composed of Lee, Elizabeth and Keyan Pourzand, who also sings and plays guitar, released their first song in 2020, “Flutter.” It’s an angsty, maximalist take on heavy-handed shoegaze, similar to that of My Bloody Valentine.

When they first came together, the then-teenage musicians were only thinking of short-term goals. Pourzand wanted to play at least one show and Elizabeth aimed to become a regular performer in their local underground music scene. They often spent their weekends frequenting different house shows, small warehouses and even neighborhood restaurants that would host punk and surf rock performances. Elizabeth describes the scene as a moshing crowd of people in cropped tees and raw-hemmed Dickies.

To this day, Lee still has a hard time processing that they will be playing Coachella, saying, “It doesn’t go over my head, but it hasn’t soaked in yet. And I don’t think it will until it happens.” His first memory of the festival is watching a video of Deadmau5’s performance with his mom who was jealous she wasn’t there. Elizabeth laughs as she reveals her first impressions of the festival which have to do with the Jenner sisters, flower crowns and YouTube beauty vloggers.

“I’m hoping to just have a good show. I don’t try to have too many expectations before going into the show, because I feel like that just sets me up for failure sometimes,” said Lee of their Sonora tent set.

Elizabeth added, “I just gonna show up and play really hard. I am curious to see the audience’s reactions because festival crowds are way more relaxed than a headline show. Sometimes we’ll have fans in the crowd who mosh for us, but it depends on the area. Either way, I’m just going to have a good show with my friends.”

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Coachella 2025 is set to take place April 11 to 13 and April 18 to 20.

Movie Reviews

Movie Review: “THE BRIDE!” – Assignment X

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Movie Review: “THE BRIDE!” – Assignment X


By ABBIE BERNSTEIN / Staff Writer


Posted: March 8th, 2026 / 08:00 PM

THE BRIDE movie poster | ©2026 Warner Bros.

Rating: R
Stars: Jessie Buckley, Christian Bale, Annette Bening, Jake Gyllenhaal, Peter Sarsgaard, Penelope Cruz, Jeannie Berlin, Zlatko Burić
Writer: Maggie Gyllenhaal, based on characters created by Mary Shelley and William Hurlbut and John Balderston
Director: Maggie Gyllenhaal
Distributor: Warner Bros.
Release Date: March 6, 2026

“THE BRIDE!” (as with the recent “WUTHERING HEIGHTS, the quotation marks are part of the title) is awash in homages, and not just the ones we might reasonably expect in a movie that takes its most obvious inspiration from 1935’s BRIDE OF FRANKENSTEIN.

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There’s that, of course, plus its source, Mary Shelley’s 1818 novel FRANKENSTEIN; OR THE MODERN PROMETHEUS, and its sober 1931 film adaptation FRANKENSTEIN. But there are also big nods to wilder takes on the legend, including YOUNG FRANKENSTEIN and THE ROCKY HORROR PICTURE SHOW and even movies that have nothing to do with FRANKENSTEIN, like BONNIE AND CLYDE.

Writer/director Maggie Gyllenhaal casts a wide net in metaphors and ideas and looks. Sometimes “THE BRIDE!” is a comedy, sometimes it’s a crime drama, sometimes it’s a love story, occasionally, it’s even a musical.

Mary Shelley (Jessie Buckley) narrates the tale to us from beyond the grave. She is haughty and naughty, intoxicated by verbiage and her own literary genius. She is going to tell us a story, she says, that she didn’t even dare imagine while alive.

We’re in 1930s Chicago, where a young escort (also Buckley) is having a really awful evening out at a fancy restaurant with some of her peers and a bunch of crass gangsters. Shelley dubs the woman “Ida” and takes possession of her, causing her to speak and act in ways that get her escorted outside. There she stumbles and takes a fatal fall.

The two goons who were with Ida are happy to describe her tumble as the result of their intentional actions to their horrible gangster boss (Zlatko Burić). Ida was suspected of talking to the cops.

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Around the same time, Frankenstein’s creation (Christian Bale) – let’s just call him “Frank,” like everybody else does – comes to Chicago to seek out the groundbreaking scientist Dr. Euphronious (Annette Bening), whose published works he has read.

Frank wants the doctor to create a companion for him. His appearance is unusual, but the most alarming injuries are covered by clothing, so he’s not as extreme-looking as, say, Boris Karloff in the role. This isn’t about sex, Frank explains when Euphronious asks why he doesn’t just hire a prostitute. After over a century of loneliness, he seeks a soulmate, and he is sure this can only be achieved by reviving a corpse.

So, Euphronious and Frank dig up the grave that turns out to belong to Ida (we never do learn how they know it belongs to a soulmate candidate as opposed to a shot-and-dumped male gangster). Euphronius revives her. Ida remembers how to walk and talk, but not who she is or what happened, so Frank and the doc tell her she’s been in an accident.

Even without Ida’s beauty, Frank is already devoted to the very notion of her. A more accommodating suitor would be hard to find. Frank has another passion, the musical films of Ronnie Reed (Jake Gyllenhaal, the filmmaker’s brother), a Fred Astaire-like star. Frank imagines himself in the midst of those dance routines, and we get some more within “THE BRIDE!”’s “real” action.

One thing leads to another, Frank and Ida go on the run, leaving a trail of bodies in their wake. They are pursued all over the country. Among those seeking them are sad-eyed police detective Jake Wiles (Peter Sarsgaard) and his secretary Myrna Mallow (Penélope Cruz), who’s better at this whole crime-solving business than he is.

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It’s all very kaleidoscopic and energetic, occasionally impressive and sometimes very funny. Bening as the frazzled, worldly Euphronious has some great moments. Buckley, currently and justifiably Oscar-nominated leading performance in HAMNET, juggles the very unalike personas of Mary and Ida with impact.

Oddly, Bale underplays Frank. We get that he is trying his hardest not to spook Ida (or anyone else), but it seems like he should have a bit more spark. Cruz, going for a snappy ‘30s working woman, has her own style that works.

But in addition to being entertaining and eye-catching, Gyllenhaal has a message that gets very muddled. This is less because it’s so familiar by now that it feels a little redundant, and more because a crucial part of the set-up collides head-on with the feminist slant.

Ida seeks to be her own person, but she is literally bodily controlled by Mary Shelley, who puts her creation in danger with her outbursts. This may help get Ida out of the clutches of the mob, but it is possession, the aftereffects of which the character understandably finds confusing and upsetting.

If Gyllenhaal wanted to discuss or dramatize the clash between what Mary, as a woman, is doing to this other woman, that would make sense, but it seems we’re just meant to somehow overlook this while being immersed in how men control women. The resulting cognitive dissonance adds another layer to a movie that already has more than it can comfortably service.

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Additionally, when Mary has one of her outbursts while inhabiting Ida, the plot comes to a screeching halt until she’s finished. Many viewers will wish Mary would stop declaiming and just let Ida be herself.

“THE BRIDE!” succeeds in being trippy and some of it is memorable. By the end, though, it is more disjointed than even a movie about experiments and a character made up of multiple people’s body parts ought to be.

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‘Sinners,’ ‘The Pitt’ win big at Writers Guild Awards after L.A. ceremony cancellation

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‘Sinners,’ ‘The Pitt’ win big at Writers Guild Awards after L.A. ceremony cancellation

The already highly decorated “Sinners” was among the top winners at the 78th Writers Guild Awards on Sunday in New York City.

The horror film, directed and written by Ryan Coogler, won the award for original screenplay, and its biggest competitor for the best picture Oscar, Paul Thomas Anderson’s “One Battle After Another,” clinched the win for adapted screenplay. “Sinners” star Miles Caton accepted the award for the former, and “One Battle” cast member Shayna McHayle for the latter.

“Sinners” star Miles Caton and “One Battle After Another” actor Shayna McHale accepted the awards for original and adapted screenplay, respectively.

(Cindy Ord / Getty Images for Writers Guild of America East)

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In the TV realm, “The Pitt” made a splash with awards for drama series, new series and episodic drama.

As for lifetime achievement honors, Robert Smigel presented Stephen Colbert with the Walter Bernstein Award for critiquing the power elite on his late-night show, which will air its final episode in May. Terry George received the Ian McLellan Hunter Award for Career Achievement from Don Cheadle, and Diana Son earned the Richard B. Jablow Award for Devoted Service to the Guild from last year’s recipient, Kathy McGee.

Most years, the Writers Guild holds simultaneous ceremonies in New York and Los Angeles. But the East Coast edition became a solo affair after WGA West canceled its ceremony amid an ongoing strike by its own staff union, who claimed guild management had “surveilled workers for union activity, terminated union supporters, and engaged in bad faith surface bargaining.”

The L.A. ceremony was set to honor James Cameron with the Laurel Award for Screenwriting Achievement, Don Reo with the Paddy Chayefsky Laurel Award for Television Writing Achievement and Mstyslav Chernov with the Paul Selvin Award for “2,000 Meters to Andriivka,” which won the award for documentary screenplay Sunday evening.

While WGA West’s board of directors said the ceremony was postponed to give members “an uncomplicated celebration of their achievements,” the Writers Guild Staff Union characterized the cancellation as an attempt to sow division between management and unionized staff, which is ill-timed given upcoming contraction negotiations between the WGA and the Alliance of Motion Picture and Television Producers, which represents Hollywood studios and streamers. In 2023, the WGA went on its longest-ever strike, lasting 148 days.

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Comedian and Emmy-nominated producer Roy Wood Jr., who this year hosted the WGA’s East Coast ceremony for the third time, during his opening monologue offered (in jest) his predictions for the negotiations, which begin later this month.

“First, I predict somebody’s gonna lose their s—,” the host said. “Cooler heads are gonna prevail, and then somebody else is gonna lose their s—.”

Here is the full list of Writers Guild Award winners:

Original screenplay: “Sinners,” written by Ryan Coogler; Warner Bro. Pictures

Adapted screenplay: “One Battle After Another,” screenplay by Paul Thomas Anderson, screen story by Paul Thomas Anderson, inspired by the novel “Vineland” by Thomas Pynchon; Warner Bros. Pictures

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Documentary screenplay: “2,000 Meters to Andriivka,” written by Mstyslav Chernov; Frontline Features

Drama series: “The Pitt,” written by Cynthia Adarkwa, Simran Baidwan, Valerie Chu, R. Scott Gemmill, Elyssa Gershman, Joe Sachs, Noah Wyle; HBO Max

Comedy series: “The Studio,” written by Evan Goldberg, Alex Gregory, Peter Huyck, Frida Perez, Seth Rogen; Apple TV

New series: “The Pitt,” written by Cynthia Adarkwa, Simran Baidwan, Valerie Chu, R. Scott Gemmill, Elyssa Gershman, Joe Sachs, Noah Wyle; HBO Max

Limited series: “Dying for Sex,” written by Sheila Callaghan, Harris Danow, Madeleine George, Elizabeth Meriwether, Amelia Roper, Kim Rosenstock, Sasha Stewart, Sabrina Wu, Keisha Zollar; FX/Hulu

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TV & streaming motion pictures: “Deep Cover,” written by Derek Connolly and Colin Trevorrow; Prime Video

Animation: “Shira Can’t Cook” (“Long Story Short”), written by Mehar Sethi; Netflix

Episodic drama: “7:00 A.M.” (“The Pitt”), written by R. Scott Gemmill; HBO Max

Episodic comedy: “Prelude” (“The Righteous Gemstones”), written by John Carcieri, Jeff Fradley, Danny R. McBride; HBO Max

Comedy/variety series – talk or sketch: “Last Week Tonight with John Oliver,” senior writers: Daniel O’Brien, Owen Parsons, Charlie Redd, Joanna Rothkopf, Seena Vali; writers: Johnathan Appel, Ali Barthwell, Tim Carvell, Liz Hynes, Ryan Ken, Sofía Manfredi, John Oliver, Taylor Kay Phillips, Chrissy Shackelford; HBO Max

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Comedy/variety specials: “Marc Maron: Panicked,” written by Marc Maron; HBO Max

Quiz and audience participation: “Celebrity Jeopardy!”, head writer: Bobby Patton; writers: Kyle Beakley, Michael Davies, Terence Gray, Amy Ozols, Tim Siedell, David Levinson-Wilk; ABC

Daytime drama: “The Young and the Restless,” associate head writers: Jeff Beldner, Marla Kanelos, Dave Ryan; writers: Susan Banks, Amanda L. Beall, Marin Gazzaniga, Rebecca McCarty, Madeleine Phillips; CBS/Paramount+

Children’s episodic, long form and specials: “When We Lose Someone” (“Tab Time”), written by Sean Presant; YouTube

Short form streaming: “The Rabbit Hole with Jimmy Kimmel,” writers: Jimmy Kimmel and Jesse Joyce; YouTube

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Documentary script — current events: “Trump’s Power & the Rule of Law” (“Frontline”), written by Michael Kirk and Mike Wiser; PBS

Documentary script — other than current events: “Forgotten Hero: Walter White and the NAACP” (“American Experience”), written by Rob Rapley; PBS

News script — regularly scheduled, bulletin or breaking report: “Devastating Flooding in Texas” (“World News Tonight with David Muir”), written by David Muir, Karen Mooney and Dave Bloch; ABC News

News script — analysis, feature or commentary: “Remembering Palestinian Journalists Killed by Israeli Forces” (“Ayman”), written by Lisa Salinas; MSNBC

Digital news: “An Isolated Boarding School Promised to Help Troubled Girls. Former Students Say They Were Abused.,” written by Sebastian Murdock and Taiyler Mitchell; HuffPost

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Radio/audio documentary: “Jerry Lewis’ Lost Holocaust Clown Movie” (“Decoder Ring”), written by Max Freedman; Slate

Radio/audio news script — regularly scheduled, bulletin or breaking report: “ABC News Radio Top of the Hour News”, written by Robert Hawley; ABC News Radio

Radio/audio news script — analysis, feature or commentary: “The Life and Legacy of Jimmy Carter,” written by Gail Lee; CBS News Radio

On air promotion: “CBS Comedy,” written by Dan Greenberger; CBS

Times staff writers Stacy Perman and Cerys Davies contributed to this report.

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‘Heel’ Review: Why Did Stephen Graham and Andrea Riseborough Sign on for This Contrived Debacle?

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‘Heel’ Review: Why Did Stephen Graham and Andrea Riseborough Sign on for This Contrived Debacle?

The original title of “Heel” was “Good Boy.” The new title is probably more accurate, though an even more accurate title might be “Painfully Annoying Punk Idiot.” I jest (a bit), since the title of “Heel” is actually a verb. The film wants to tell the story of a budding hooligan who needs to be brought to heel. That said, does anyone seriously want to see a movie about a 19-year-old British sociopath who gets chained up in a basement so that the weird upper-middle-class couple who’ve kidnapped him can modify his behavior? “Heel” is like “A Clockwork Orange” remade as the year’s worst Sundance movie.

The opening sequence is actually promising. It depicts, in rapidly edited documentary-like montage, a reckless night out on the town by Tommy (Anson Boon) and his friends. They’re hopped-up club kids, and Tommy is their snarling, curly-haired, sexually coercive wastrel ringleader, living in the moment, pouring drinks down his throat, snorting coke and popping pills, dancing and carousing and puking and rutting in the bathroom, pushing himself to a higher and higher high, until he winds up collapsed on the sidewalk — a ritual, we gather, that has happened many times before. Only this time his crumpled body is gathered up by a mysterious stranger.     

When Tommy wakes up, he’s in the basement of a stately stone house somewhere in the British countryside. He’s got a metal collar around his neck, and it’s chained to the ceiling. The film has barely gotten started, and already it’s cut to the second half of “A Clockwork Orange”: Can this monster delinquent be rehabilitated? Theoretically, that’s an interesting question, except that the way this happens is so garishly contrived that we can only go with the movie by putting any plea for reality on permanent hold.

Who are the people who have kidnapped Tommy? Chris (Stephen Graham) is a mild chap in a toupee who goes about his mission with a puckish vengeance disguised as gentility. His wife, Kathryn (Andrea Riseborough), is so neurasthenic she’s like a ghost. (She has suffered some trauma that isn’t colored in.) The two have a cherubic preteen son they call Sunshine (Kit Rakusen). And why, exactly, are they doing what they’re doing? We have no idea. Trying to make a bad person into a good person is not, in itself, a terrible notion, but the conceit of “Heel” — that Tommy is locked in a dungeon, being treated like a dog, because that’s what it will take to change him — is like a toxic right-wing fantasy that the film somehow reconfigures into an implausible liberal “family” allegory.

Ah, plausibility! How unhip to gripe about the absence of it. Yet watching “Heel,” I found it impossible to suspend my disbelief for two seconds. The entire movie, directed by the Polish filmmaker Jan Komasa (“Corpus Christie”) from a script by Bartek Bartosik and Naqqash Khalid, is just a grimy monotonous conceit. It’s been thought out thematically but not in terms of recognizable human behavior. It’s like a film-student short stretched out to an agonizing 110 minutes.

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Anson Boon, a charismatic actor who did an okay job of playing Johnny Rotten in Danny Boyle’s TV miniseries “Pistol” (though he never conjured Rotten’s homicidal gleam), infuses Tommy with a loutish energy that in the early scenes, at least, makes him a convincing candidate for either prison or the contemporary equivalent of shock therapy. And yet the character is exhaustingly obnoxious. As a filmmaker, Komasa doesn’t dramatize — he uses one-note traits to clobber the audience. Stephen Graham’s Chris is as quiet and circumspect as Tommy is abrasive. He tries to train Tommy by showing him motivational tapes, and by subjecting him to Tommy’s own depraved TikToks. He then rigs up an elaborate system of gutters on the ceiling so that Tommy, in his metal leash, can wander around the house, a sign that he’s been housebroken.

Tommy has to grow and change, since there wouldn’t be a movie otherwise. In the process, he gets less annoying but also less interesting, because “Heel” sentimentalizes his transformation. Komasa seems to have missed the key irony of “A Clockwork Orange”: that the behavior modification of Alex is as brutalizing as his original state of punk anarchy. In “Heel,” Tommy’s evolution is singularly unconvincing — by the end, he’s practically ready to be the suitor in a Jane Austen drama. But that’s all of a piece with a movie so false it puts the audience in the doghouse.

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