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Movie review: Rami Malek will rock you, even if 'Bohemian Rhapsody' doesn't

“Bohemian Rhapsody” - ★ ★

Where does a preening, pansexual rock god get his powers? The Freddie Mercury biopic “Bohemian Rhapsody” traces his sonorous majesty to an unlikely place: his back teeth.

Mercury, nee Farrokh Bulsara, was born with four extra incisors, giving him a bigger mouth. Introducing himself to his future Queen bandmates Mercury, as played by Rami Malek, explains that the added chompers endow him with enhanced vocal range.

Mercury's voice was so expansive that it prompted genuine scientific inquiry. But range is one thing sorely lacking in Bryan Singer's “Bohemian Rhapsody,” a slavishly conventional rock biopic that opts for the stereotypical despite a subject who devoted himself to the unconventional. It's a remarkably bland movie about a deliciously vibrant performer.

Yet while “Bohemian Rhapsody” is hollowly formulaic, it's filled, often fantastically, by Malek's sinuous, fully inhabited performance as the Queen frontman.

Malek, the “Mr. Robot” actor, throws himself into every strutting second of screen time. He lacks both Mercury's voice (it was overdubbed for singing and performance scenes) and Mercury's teeth (Malek was outfitted with fake ones). But Malek's performance, especially on stage, is so full-bodied that he transcends both his own differences with Mercury and the tepid surrounding melodrama.

The band Queen (Joe Mazzello, left, Ben Hardy, Rami Malek and Gwilym Lee) achieves fame with its flamboyant frontman in "Bohemian Rhapsody." Courtesy of Twentieth Century Fox

That “Bohemian Rhapsody” is a bit of a mess isn't altogether a surprise. Singer was fired toward the end of shooting and was replaced by Dexter Fletcher. Singer remains the credited director; Fletcher is listed as a producer. The script, too, underwent several passes before one by Anthony McCarten prevailed.

The film opens moments before Queen's Live Aid performance at Wembley Stadium in 1985, and - as if by rock biopic decree - shifts back in time to young Freddie, in his mid-20s and living with his parents in the London suburbs.

Mercury was born to a Parsi family from Zanzibar (he attended boarding school in India), but we get only the slightest of hints of his family heritage or what made Mercury run from it. By the time we meet him, he hasn't yet adopted his Roman god moniker, but he might as well have. Young Freddie is already a larger-than-life figure clearly destined to a life of skintight jumpsuits and glam-rock anthems. In a flash he goes from slinging luggage on the Heathrow tarmac to convincing guitarist Brian May (Gwilym Lee) and drummer Roger Taylor (Ben Hardy) that he's their new lead singer.

Everything in “Bohemian Rhapsody” happens less with the thrust of life than the rapid-fire recounting of a biographical history, sometimes rigorously in step with Wikipedia, sometimes taking shortcuts to avoid anything that strays outside a neatly contrived narrative. In the span of minutes, Queen is a sensation with a record contract (Mike Myers joins for a tongue-in-cheek cameo as EMI executive Ray Foster) and aspirations for much more.

The band Queen (Ben Hardy, Gwilym Lee, Joe Mazzello and Rami Malek) achieves fame in the formulaic rock biopic "Bohemian Rhapsody." Courtesy of Twentieth Century Fox

The conflict, hinted at in passing glances in between recording sessions, is that Mercury, who died of AIDS-related pneumonia in 1991 at 45, isn't quite so free offstage as he is on, despite all his radical flamboyance. Much time is spent with his longtime partner Mary Austin (Lucy Boyton) and, later, with a diabolical personal manager-boyfriend, Paul Prenter (Allen Leech).

But the film mostly sticks to the familiar trajectory of rock stardom: studio magic, backstage excess, band infighting, drug problems and - that most heinous of menaces in the music biopic - the temptation of disco.

The only time “Bohemian Rhapsody” works is when it finally retreats from not just the standard biopic narrative but from storytelling altogether. It concludes with a nearly song-by-song re-creation of the band's reunion show at Live Aid, which, despite the movie's fudged timeline, took place two years before Mercury's AIDS diagnosis. Still, the power comes mainly from the tunes and from Mercury/Malek's magnificent stage presence. “Bohemian Rhapsody” might be easy come, easy go, but Malek makes for a showstopping silhouetto of a man.

<b>Starring:</b> Rami Malek, Lucy Boyton, Ben Hardy, Gwilym Lee, Allen Leech

<b>Directed by:</b> Bryan Singer

<b>Other:</b> A 20th Century Fox release. Rated PG-13 for thematic elements, suggestive material, drug content and language. 134 minutes

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