Wendy Ide 

Kill Your Friends review – grubby satire on the Britpop industry

Nicholas Hoult shows charisma in the lead role, but this cast of repugnant characters is draining
  
  

Left to right: Gregor Cameron, Nick Hoult and John Niven in Kill Your Friends.
Left to right: Gregor Cameron, Nicholas Hoult and John Niven in Kill Your Friends Photograph: Dean Rogers/pr

John Niven adapts his own savagely satirical novel about the Britpop-era music industry and the monsters that dwell there into a grubby and gruellingly mean-spirited feature film.

Nicholas Hoult has a certain shark-like charisma as Steven Stelfox, the indie-pop Patrick Bateman at the centre of this tale of murderous ambition. Stelfox’s appetite for success is only matched by his appetite for debauchery – and in this, he is matched by pretty much every other character in the movie. All available surfaces are constantly coated with cocaine and prostitutes. This is not a film for anyone who requires their female characters to be more than the pneumatically inflated punchline to a lad gag.

Kill Your Friends - video review

But the problem here is that while a reprehensible antihero is not necessarily an issue, an entire cast of equally repugnant characters is draining. It feels like taking a bath in anthrax. And, for all its smart-arse cynicism, the film is low on actual insights into the industry it is trying to skewer.

 

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