The latest in the long line of musical documentaries is “Wham!”, Netflix’s new film chronicling the rise of the eponymous English pop duo which became a global sensation during the early and mid 1980s. It may be easy for some to forget the far-reaching popularity of Wham! in large part due to George Michael’s solo career success. But during their four-year run Wham! would sell over 30 million records worldwide.
“Wham!” is directed by Chris Smith who has found himself a comfy home on Netflix. Coming out on the 30th anniversary of the duo’s debut album “Fantastic”, his documentary tells the story of friends Andrew Ridgeley and George Michael through audio interviews and archive footage from concerts, television appearances, and home videos. All together it follows a pretty basic music doc formula, but it should be a nice ‘turn back of the clock’ experience for fans.
The film touches on Ridgeley and Michael’s childhood including their first meeting as preteens at Bushey Meads School in Bushey, Hertfordshire, England. But it doesn’t waste much time before jumping into their music career starting with their early struggles to get their feet in the door with record companies. Then came their big break when they were unexpectedly scheduled to perform on the popular BBC television show Top of the Pops.
Suddenly Wham! was getting noticed and after signing with Epic Records and embracing a more poppy image they became known worldwide. As their story progresses Smith finds room for nearly every one of their songs including early stuff like “Wham Rap” and “Club Tropicana” to their chart-topping hits like “Wake Me Up Before You Go-Go”, “Careless Whisper”, and “Everything She Wants”.
To a much lesser degree Smith also looks at the duo’s personal lives. It includes Michael’s well-documented struggle with his sexuality and his embrace of his pop-star persona as a means of defining his true self. And there is a little about Ridgeley’s experiences falling into Michael’s shadow as well as hints of his hard partying lifestyle which became tabloid fodder.
But the documentary doesn’t offer much past that, coming to a full stop with the duo’s sold-out 1986 farewell concert at Wembley Stadium. It doesn’t touch on anything beyond their final show. Nothing about Ridgely’s post-Wham! life which was mostly out of the public eye and nothing about Michael’s legal troubles or drug issues.
As a fan piece “Wham!” works pretty well. It highlights the bands ups while steering mostly clear of the downs, and it’s full of the music fans love. As a meatier documentary it falls a little short. It does a good job reminding people just how big Wham! became (something I admit to have forgotten) and we get a little insight into their creative processes. But some things remain unexplored leaving us with a fun time capsule movie but not much more than that. “Wham!” is now streaming on Netflix.
VERDICT – 2.5 STARS




I was never a Whammer so not for me.
Probably a good move. It really doesn’t tell you anything about them you don’t already know.
I wanna see this as I grew up on Wham! as a kid. I still love Wham! I love George Michael. My dad loved George Michael and when I heard he died. That hurt and my parents were really devastated about that. And on Xmas Eve of all days too as my mother and I were dealing with food poisoning at that time. 2016, still the worst year ever.
I remember Wham! so well. The movie is pretty good at telling us what we already know. I wish it had told us something new. That’s my biggest beef with it.
That could be an issue but that probably won’t bother me. Especially as Netflix have done worse documentaries like the one about David Foster sucking his own dick over how many Grammys he’s won and saying “my trophy case is light”. What a cocksucker.
Hot Potato: The Story of The Wiggles is gonna be one of the best musical documentaries on Prime Video. ❤️💛💜💙
Thanks for the review of this one, I had never heard of it. I might watch it, I enjoyed the one about Queen, Elton John, Motley Crue…. Haven’t seen the David Bowie one yet. But I like these and George Michael was a great singer. My top listened to song on Apple Music is him doing Somebody to Love at the Freddie Mercury tribute.
You may enjoy this one then. I liked it as a pure time capsule movie. I just wish they had went a little deeper.