Andy Samberg plays Conner4Real, who embarks on a solo career after splitting from his boy band.
The mockumentary Popstar so accurately mimics the music biz it means to lampoon, and so faithfully reproduces the behind-the-scenes music-doc aesthetic it intends to goof, you might not even see the jokes: The ego, excess and product synergy just don’t feel all that exaggerated compared to pop music’s real-life absurdities. And that may be an intentional, even artful, bit of misdirection on the part of the Lonely Island comedy trio, who wrote, directed and star in the film. Because, hard truths: Popstar’s jokes land pillow-soft.
Saturday Night Live is where Lonely Island first made their name as digital-short savants. You could call their viral music videos “Lazy Sunday” and “Dick in a Box” prep work for Popstar’s feature-length ribbing of the industrial pop music machine, but nothing here touches the compact, catchy, wackadoodle brilliance of those shorts. It’s that same old saw: 90 seconds is a lot easier to fill than 90 minutes.
Andy Samberg (Brooklyn Nine-Nine) plays pop star Conner4Real, who recently and acrimoniously split with his Style Boyz bandmates (Jorma Taccone and Akiva Schaffer, who also co-directed) to embark on a solo career. It’s tempting to try to read between the lines for a meta-narrative — in real life, Samberg’s star rose faster and higher than his friends’ — but that would be making a mountain out of nary a molehill. These Lonely Island kids seem to like each other an awful lot and, in turn, are themselves so very likable. (Enough to attract a gaggle of A-list cameos from Questlove, Nas, Usher, Seal and Ringo Starr.) You really can’t buy this kind of goodwill. If only it paid off more.