Friday, January 2, 2026

Song Sung Blue: Musical lightning!

Song Sung Blue (2025) • View trailer
Four stars (out of five). Rated PG-13, for dramatic intensity, brief profanity and fleeting drug use
Available via: Movie theaters
By Derrick Bang • Published in The Davis Enterprise, 1.4.26

If writer/director Craig Brewer’s poignant drama weren’t based on actual events, it would be a shameless tear-jerker.

 

Be advised: The fact that it is based on actual events, makes it even more of a tear-jerker.

 

Mike (Hugh Jackman, left), Dave (Fisher Stevens, center left) and Mark (Michael
Imperioli, center right) listen intently, as Tom (Jim Belushi) outlines their upcoming
touring schedule.

In the interests of full disclosure, I’ve been a life-long Neil Diamond fan since early high school, which makes me inclined to be both forgiving and potentially hyper-critical. But the latter never came into play, because both Hugh Jackman and Kate Hudson are fabulous singers and performers. 

Brewer’s film, based on Greg Kohs’ 2008 documentary of the same title, deftly profiles small-time musicians Mike Sardina (Jackman) and Claire Stengl (Hudson): how they met, and the magic that occurred once they got together.

 

Brewer begins unexpectedly, with a tight-tight-tight close-up of Jackman’s face, as Mike gravely recounts some seminal moments in his life: a confession of sorts, which concludes as the camera pulls back, to reveal that he’s at an Alcoholics Anonymous meeting. It’s a special day — his 20-year “sobriety birthday” — and he celebrates it as he has each one before, by concluding with a solo guitar performance of “Song Sung Blue.”

 

Mike moonlights as a mechanic to support his true passion, as a veteran musician — nicknamed Lightning — on the Milwaukee gigging circuit, performing whatever is demanded at county fairs, small auditoriums and dive bars. After uncharacteristically refusing a gig — insisting that trying to impersonate Hawaiian pop singer Don Ho is too much of a stretch — he chances to catch Claire doing her Patsy Cline act at the Wisconsin State Fair.

 

They click (to put it mildly).

 

“I’m not a songwriter, I’m not a sex symbol,” he confesses. “I just want to entertain people.”

 

“I don’t want to be a hairdresser,” she replies, “I want to sing, I want to dance, I want a garden, I want a cat.”

 

The relationship happens quickly, both because they’re sympatico … and also because Jackman and Hudson radiate charm and charisma the way the rest of us breathe. Mike and Claire are totally cute together, with a goofy, giddy level of excitement like teenagers experiencing love for the first time.

 

Both have painful pasts. In addition to his hard-fought sobriety, Mike carries trauma from his service in Vietnam as a “tunnel rat,” and has a failed marriage behind him; Claire also is divorced. 

 

Mike gets occasional visits from his college-age daughter, Angelina (pop chanteuse King Princess); their relationship is prickly, at best. Claire has two kids — teenage Rachel (Ella Anderson) and adolescent Dana (Hudson Hensley) — who frequently drive her crazy. Both Mike and Claire also struggle financially.

 

Musically, though, they go together like peanut butter and jelly.

 

To say that Mike reveres Diamond would be a huge understatement, but he’s never had the courage to perform the man’s music, believing he wouldn’t be good enough. Claire bolsters that courage; he impulsively decides the best approach would be the two of them together. To her delight, he dubs her Thunder … and they become Thunder and Lightning.

 

He plays guitar; she plays keyboards. Thanks to Mike’s gigging career, he also can tap the talents of good friends. They include Buddy Holly impersonator and backup guitarist Mark Shurilla (Michael Imperioli); James Brown impersonator Sex Machine (Mustafa Shakir, a total hoot); and The Esquires, a noted Milwaukee soul band with whom Mike occasionally performs. Just like that, they’ve got a horn section.

 

What subsequently happens is by no means on par with a chorus girl becoming an overnight star on Broadway, but Brewer nonetheless delivers an engaging level of “discovery drama.” This climb to local fame — and, indeed, the entire film — is accompanied by a veritable greatest hits from Diamond’s catalogue, many of the songs cleverly intercutting ongoing events with “getting there” montage sequences.

 

Every song performance carries more than its own emotional significance; its placement also is key to what’s happening, at that moment, to Mike and Claire.

 

Jackman and Hudson perform the tunes spectacularly, with enthusiasm, passion and — when required — hypnotic power. Jackman’s delivery of “Holly Holy” and “Brother Love’s Salvation Show” are appropriately robust … but nothing tops the astonishing twist of fate that culminates with a performance of “Forever in Blue Jeans.”

 

Fisher Stevens is wonderfully understated as Dave Watson, Mike’s manager … and dentist (!). Stevens imbues the role with warmth and gentle humor. Jim Belushi is hilarious as Tom D’Amato, a motor-mouthed “fixer” who runs bus tours … but also is on good ol’ boy terms with club and casino owners, and therefore can arrange bookings.

 

That’s another part of this film’s endearing charm: the fact that all of these working-class folks have each other’s backs. 

 

Anderson navigates an impressive character arc, as this saga proceeds; Rachel begins as a sullen teenager wholly disinterested in Mike, then slowly morphs into an accomplished young adult. Anderson also shares a great scene with King Princess, as Rachel and Dana size each other up while meeting for the first time.

 

Young Hensley is terrific. Although initially guarded, Dana is more open-minded about Mike; his epiphany comes when Thunder and Lightning debut their band in his garage (where else?), and the boy gets so excited, he breaks into a dance. 

 

Brewer takes a few minor liberties with established fact, the most significant of which is compressing the actual timeline. This film takes place during a few years (if that) in the middle 1990s, whereas Thunder and Lightning performed together in bars, fairs and festivals from 1989 to 2006. 

 

Brewer fills this drama with many stand-up-and-cheer moments … but Thunder and Lightning also endure more than their fair share of calamity. Bring a box of Kleenex, ’cause you’ll need it … and even viewers made of stern stuff are apt to lose it when Claire delivers a wrenching solo performance of “I’ve Been This Way Before.”


Truth really is stranger than fiction … and these two had a helluva ride. 

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