Sixty years on in age, nearly forty years into his illustrious career, Elton John personifies one of music’s most dynamic and colossal success stories. While selling over 200 million albums worldwide, John has scored seven successive number one albums, charted a top-forty single for twenty-six consecutive years, and holds the record for the highest-selling single in history. Those highlights, among others, are featured in a new documentary, entitled, Elton John: Someone Like Me.
While the story of how an introverted English boy named Reginald Dwight transformed himself into a flamboyant Rock and Roll superstar named Elton John is nothing short of extraordinary, the manner in which the story is told through this documentary leaves the viewer ultimately dissatisfied. Because Elton John’s career is so extensive and prolific, this 98-minute biography only skims over the highlights (and the lowlights) without offering much context to or analysis of any details.
In addition to the documentary’s narration, a small assortment of journalists and biographers add commentary and a modicum of insight. As well, sparing clips of Elton John, most of them outdated and superfluous, are scattered throughout the film.
The narrative begins by chronicling the childhood of Reginald Dwight, a young boy living with his quarrelling parents, who took to playing the piano by age four. Able to play by ear yet unable to read sheet music, he won a junior scholarship to the Royal Academy of Music by age eleven. While he learned to play and appreciate classical music, he was most inspired by Little Richard, Jerry Lee Lewis, and Fats Domino, musicians who effectively turned the piano into a Rock and Roll instrument.
Scanning over the intervening years, the film mentions Reginald Dwight’s first band, Bluesology, which released the single, “Come Back Baby,” only to see it promptly obliterated in the charts by the Rolling Stones “(I Can’t Get No) Satisfaction.” Bluesology subsequently dissolved without making any discernable dent on the British music scene.





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Article comments
1 - Glen Boyd
In fairness, I think you'd need a lot more than 98 minutes to even adequately tell Elton's story. You could probably do sixty minutes on the mid-seventies (when he was arguablthe biggest rock act in the world) alone.
Good review though Donald, I'll probably be steering away from this one.
-Glen
2 - Glen Boyd
(arguably the biggest rock act in the world) was what I meant to type above.
Time to go to bed...
-Glen