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Bob Marley: One Love

Bob Marley: One Love

  • Status: Released
  • 14-02-2024
  • Runtime: 104 min
  • Score: 6.7
  • Vote count: 799

Jamaican singer-songwriter Bob Marley overcomes adversity to become the most famous reggae musician in the world.

Kingsley Ben-Adir

Bob Marley

Lashana Lynch

Rita Marley

James Norton

Chris Blackwell

Tosin Cole

Tyrone Downie

Umi Myers

Cindy Breakspeare

Anthony Welsh

Don Taylor

Nia Ashi

Teen Rita Marley

Aston Barrett Jr.

Family Man Barrett

Anna-Sharé Blake

Judy Mowatt

Gawaine 'J-Summa' Campbell

Antonio 'Gillie' Gilbert

Naomi Cowan

Marcia Griffiths

Alexx A-Game

Peter Tosh

Michael Gandolfini

Howard Bloom

Quan-Dajai Henriques

Teen Bob Marley

David Marvin Kerr Jr.

Junior Marvin

Hector Donald Lewis

Carly Barrett

Abijah Livingston

Bunny Livingston

Nadine Marshall

Cedella Malcolm

Sheldon Shepherd

Neville Garrick

Andrae Simpson

Donald Kinsey

Stefan Wade

Seeco Patterson

Brian Todd Boucher

Claudie Massop

Cornelius Grant

Bucky Marshall

Nolan Collignon

Young Bob Marley

Mekhai Newell

Stephen Marley

Xavier Woolry

David 'Ziggy' Marley

Kailey Titus

Cedella Marley

Rihanna Willoughby

Sharon Marley

Courtney Edwards

Teen Bunny Livingston

Narado Williams

Teen Peter Tosh

Matthew Malcolm Blake

Young Seeco Patterson

Stephen-Rhae Johnson

Joe Higgs

Tanner Paul

Jeff Walker

Calvin Mitchell

Omeriah Malcolm

Jo-Anne Williams

Auntie Vie

Jeff Crossley

Coxsone Dodd

Wilfred Chambers

Mortimer Planno

Jason Wright

Junior Braithwaite

Robbie Young

Bootboy

Mutabaruka

Elder Lewis

Aksel Üstün

French Journalist

Sundra Oakley

Diane Jobson

Sam Palladio

Joe Strummer

Everaldo Creary

Lee Scratch Perry

Daniel J. Hickson

Officer McCulloch

Obioma Ugoala

Doctor - University Hospital 1976

Dónall Ó Héalai

Benjamin Elswitt

Yasmeen Scott

Bianca Jagger

Bridgette Bucknor

Poor Woman

Harry Burton

Doctor Mulberge

Nestor Aaron Absera

Australian Reporter

Fleur de Wit

Reporter

Laila Alj

Reporter

Aisha Davis

Reporter

Benedict Clarke

Reporter

Dominic Charman

Reporter

Emma Bown

Reporter

Fiona Helen Armstrong

Reporter

Kane L. Pearson

Reporter

Lauryn Louise

Reporter

Simon Bass

Reporter

Tom Balmont

Reporter

Michael Amiar

Marcel

Njeri Osbourne

Cherry Smith

Krystle Chong

Beverly Kelso

Fae A. Ellington

Announcer - National Heroes Park

Raimu Itfum

British Police Officer

Nadean Rawlins

Trench Town Woman

Cosmo Wellings

Mick Jagger

Timmoy Sinclair

Police Officer

Derrick Levy

Police Officer

Daniel Melville Jr.

Norval Marley

Abba Samuel Tadely

Haile Selassie

Henry Douthwaite

Norval

Christopher Jordan Bernard

Claudie Hood

Amalie Gissel

Fan

Youness Bouzinab

Fan

Eleonora Andronaco

Fan

Terence Schweizer

Fan

Princess Donnough

Fan

Jordan Laidley

Fan

Pierre Angus

Fan

Jaden Evelyn

Jamaican Crowd Member

Ivy Freeman-Attwood

Female News Reporter

Gareth Armstrong

TV Sports Announcer

Roger Ringrose

Male News Reporter

Micheal Ward

The Shooter (uncredited)

Bob Marley

Self (archive footage)

Terence Hughes

Stage Security (uncredited)

r96sk

It's fine, just nothing all that memorable. I had a pleasant enough time viewing <em>'Bob Marley: One Love'</em>, though it does kinda seem a bit hollow post-watch - as in I don't feel like I've learned much nor actually seen that much, the movie has like three noteworthy events but then that's kinda it. The music from those involved also didn't feel amazingly utilised, I guess they didn't want it to be too jukebox-y. Kingsley Ben-Adir does well in the lead role as Bob Marley himself. I'm not a Marley superfan or anything close, I basically only know his biggest hits, but the resemblance of Ben-Adir seemed off to me - a thought that was only solidified when the real Marley appears via archive footage at the end. Perhaps that's just me, though. Lashana Lynch gives a good performance, spearheading the rest of the cast who are alright; interesting to see James Norton, Michael Gandolfini too... even if I didn't realise it was Gandolfini until the credits. Overall, it does feel like the film only scratches the surface of Marley's life. I wanted more from it, but to be fair it is still a decent flick in my opinion.

CinemaSerf

Sadly, this is one of those films that shoves almost all of it's best bits into the trails. What's left is a curiously sterile representation of the life of this vibrant and visionary man. To be fair, Kingsley Ben-Amir does turn in quite a charismatic performance, but the rest of that characters are largely under-cooked and seem there to make up the numbers. We get little by way of establishment. Why is he revered on his home island of Jamaica at the start? We are plonked into the centre of a political hotbed and then all to briefly, bullets are flying and we are in London, his family in Delaware. Again, little meat on the bones of context there for us to understand just what was going on and why he was so important to both sides in that conflict - alive or dead. The last twenty minutes does allow for more of his musical talents to shine, and KBA delivers them enthusiastically and engagingly, but somehow I just felt this was the thinnest of coats about his enigma. James Norton just looked like he was along because he liked the music and Lashana Lynch is totally unremarkable too. Son Ziggy may well have had a hand in this, but it really under-delivers on a story that I thought should have been a no-brainer politically, musically and culturally. Sorry, this is just a rather disappointing chronology that skirts across his life like a stylus on well worn vinyl. Pity.

Manuel São Bento

FULL SPOILER-FREE REVIEW @ https://fandomwire.com/bob-marley-one-love-review-a-sanitized-homage/ "Bob Marley: One Love navigates the intricacies of biographical storytelling with mixed success. Its commendable focus on Marley’s message and music, coupled with good performances, highlights the enduring relevance of his legacy. However, the reluctance to engage with the more contentious aspects of his life and the oversimplification of his political contributions undermine the potential for a more nuanced, complete exploration. While the movie serves as a vibrant homage to Marley’s spirit and artistry, it ultimately leaves me yearning for a deeper, more critical study of the complexities that defined one of the most influential artists of the 20th century." Rating: C

Brent Marchant

In addition to telling an individual’s life story, one of the other primary objectives of a film biography is to provide insight into the protagonist’s character and nature. Unfortunately, that’s where this profile of reggae icon Bob Marley (Kingsley Ben-Adir) tends to come up somewhat short. Director Reinaldo Marcus Green’s biopic about the legendary musician and peace advocate provides viewers with a somewhat scattershot and episodic look at the artist’s life, primarily focused on the last few years of his life, intercut with flashbacks that are largely inserted without explanation and don’t come across as especially insightful or enlightening. To the film’s credit, it features a fine repertoire of Marley’s music, including the origins of many of his works, as well as fine performances by Ben-Adir and Lashana Lynch as the musician’s wife, Rita. However, I came away from this offering feeling as though I didn’t know a lot more about its subject than I did going in, particularly since many story threads are raised but never sufficiently resolved. It also probably didn’t help that the film’s sound quality (in the non-musical sequences) left much to be desired, often resulting in the need to strain to hear and comprehend the dialogue. In many ways, “One Love” feels like a missed opportunity to tell the story of someone who had much to say but whose message doesn’t come across nearly as clearly as it could and should have. Listen to Marley’s music instead – you’ll get more out of one of his albums than you’re likely to absorb from this picture.