
‘Hurry Up Tomorrow' Review - The Weeknd's Life Unravels In A Tedious Music Video Disguised As A Terrible Movie
Remember The Idol? Of course you don't. Anyone who watched HBO's second collaboration with Sam Levinson has rightly gone to extensive lengths in hopes of ensuring that the show's existence has been scrubbed from their memories. The show, which followed a pop icon named Jocelyn (Lily-Rose Depp) as she pursued the proverbial title of 'America's Sexiest Pop Star,' while her new collaborator, Tedros (Abel 'The Weeknd' Tesfaye), dramatically influenced the direction of her career and thus that of her idealistic celebrity life. It had raw star power – Da'Vine Joy Randolph, Troye Sivan, Hank Azaria, Rachel Sennott, and others were all mainstays in the cast – but its 'plot' was a clogged, disastrous mechanism that said nothing new and seemed only to exist for the sake of jaws agape and furious social media reactions. It barely resembled a television series; it barely resembled anything at all.
If you do happen to remember something about The Idol, it's probably the show's willingness to step over the line with its depictions of sexuality and sex itself, especially when it came to Jocelyn's newest single, 'World Class Sinner,' a crappy tune that the rattailed Tedros felt needed some reworking. The remix he helps Jocelyn record made her feel freer than ever as an artist, yet left everyone on her team baffled, uncomfortable, and even a bit frightened. That's because much of the song is sung in breathy tones, seemingly indicating that Jocelyn was having sex while recording it, and chock-full of moans, squeals, and well, sex noises. It's a dreadful ditty, but one that fit perfectly inside the show: With all of its faults, The Idol succeeded in its primary goal of showing how fame, fortune, and father issues can drive even the biggest stars toward self-inflicted supernovae. There's absolutely no doubt that both Levinson and Tesfaye, two of the three show's co-creators, felt they'd caught lightning in a bottle, becoming masterminds of the melodramatic in real time. Of course, critics and audiences couldn't disagree more, as the show was widely panned and ultimately cancelled before the first season's body was cold.
In many ways, Tesfaye's new project, Hurry Up Tomorrow, reminded me of that horrible tune, and not just because the artist still predominantly known as The Weeknd – though he's toyed with dropping the stage name altogether – spends most of its runtime breathing quite heavily and all but moaning through the motions as it speedwalks its way toward nothing in particular. More so, the film (which shares its name with the singer's newest album and runs a music video for the titular track before the movie actually starts) has more in common with Jocelyn's reception of her new sound than anything else. The only thing that differentiates Levinson and Tesfaye's creation and the latter's perception of his own stardom – Hurry Up Tomorrow illustrates him as an insomniac whose music has a deeper, darker significance than even he is willing to acknowledge – is that Jocelyn is a fictional character, and thus easier to dismiss. Not much, on the other hand, separates The Weeknd and co-writer/director Trey Edward Shults' brainchild from being an ad for an album that has been slow to gain traction on pop music charts that are being dominated by a new wave of artists. An ad for the album, which was released on Jan. 31, 2025, literally appears after the conclusion of the aforementioned music video and reads 'OUT NOW,' as if the whole purpose of releasing a Lionsgate-backed thriller was to reach audiences that may not have had any idea that The Weeknd had some new-ish music to offer the world.
That music is the soundtrack to Hurry Up Tomorrow, which makes it even harder to buy anything that this self-described 'existential odyssey' is attempting to sell. Tesfaye plays himself in the film, an insomniac musician on the verge of a mental breakdown who drinks and performs and broods and performs and drinks some more. Much of the movie's first act is spent watching The Weeknd as he stares into a dressing room mirror, contemplating the very idea that he has to go on stage in a matter of moments to share his gift with the world. And to be fair, Tesfaye is a remarkable performer; just look at the Super Bowl LV halftime show, which featured plenty of The Weeknd's hits like 'Can't Feel My Face' and 'Blinding Lights,' just months before that second song became the star of a Tik Tok trend at the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic. Yet in the years since 2016's 'Starboy,' the album on which 'Blinding Lights' was the biggest banger, the star's music has been less effective and thus less streamed. Blame the pandemic, or blame the artist's 'reinvention,' as critics have called the two albums that followed, or blame new faces. Whatever the case may be, The Idol is probably the biggest thing that The Weeknd has been a part of in close to a decade.
Perhaps that is a signature pillar in his own changing direction, the first effort in a potentially long line of moves that could see Tesfaye turning his pop stardom into a broader artistic career. But if his future endeavors are anything like Hurry Up Tomorrow, said career could be short and not all that sweet, as the film is, plainly put, a pompous, ludicrous, self-indulgent, ambling excuse for a movie that only seemed survivable due to the presence of Shults, and even his talents seem to have been washed away by the impulses and interests of his more powerful, famous collaborator. The auteur behind Krisha, It Comes At Night, and Waves has long been criticized for some of his narrative tendencies – heavy on brutality, light on the humanity he convinced audiences he was prioritizing – but there are elements in each of his three previous features that indicated real promise. Shults has made it known that he formerly served an apprenticeship under Terrence Malick, and qualities (like a distinct vision of how to portray colors on film, for one) have often been seen in his work.
They're nowhere to be found here. The colors that appear on screen are meaningless bursts of blue and red, as if to show the foggy essences of good and evil that are battling within The Weeknd's psyche; the dialogue between characters tends to be reduced to screaming matches that end with someone, primarily Barry Keoghan's Lee (playing Tesfaye's manager), telling his damaged client that he's one of one, a brilliant and untouchable talent whose dark thoughts don't define him; and Shults' now-signature move, a spinning camera in the backseat of a car, is used so frequently here that a motion sickness warning should have come before the film. If you don't typically get sick from furious oscillation and flashing lights, you will, thanks to this barrage, a crash course in an interesting technique that is used to little effect, if not none at all.
It's the kind of film that would tank the career of a burgeoning auteur who didn't already have three audacious, ambitious features to his name, all before the age of 40. And it still might, given how poorly his body of work – namely 2019's Waves – holds up on rewatches. But the problems here go far beyond pure filmmaking decisions. This is meant to be the tale of a singer whose life is thrown into chaos as he deals with that of an internal variety at the same time, yet what actually unfolds is nothing short of a lazy Misery riff with The Weeknd's songs as its soundtrack. Hurry Up Tomorrow's Annie Wilkes is played by Jenna Ortega, continuing the star of Netflix's Wednesday's lousy run of parts that sit in devastating contrast to the actor's apparent cinephilic interests. She plays Anima, a tortured soul unto herself, a fan of The Weeknd who spends a lonely night with the singer, during which he feels seen by her and begs her to never leave him. When morning comes and he's all too eager to head out, Anima feels betrayed, but not as though she was used as a prop in Abel's healing journey. Her anger is derived from a place of being needed for greater discovery. She feels that her idol's discography is more profound than the artist himself lets on, and itches to convince him to admit it. Given the Misery of it all, it's only a matter of time before he's tied to the bed, their hotel room is trashed, and a series of tunes are played through a speaker in an effort to get The Weeknd to be vulnerable again.
This is a movie that is so desperate to be a kaleidoscopic trip that it forgets the basics of storytelling, as if that was ever really its goal to begin with. What is more likely is that The Weeknd and Shults bought into its star's self-mythology and felt it worthy of a feature film, one in which a pop star feels abandoned by his loved ones and misunderstood by everyone who remains in his orbit. Shults deserves some credit for being the anti-Levinson – that is, attempting to be a provocative storyteller as opposed to defining his filmmaking ideals by provocations themselves – but he's similarly over-reliant on making cool-looking images that would fit far better in a music video, where a real plot is less of a non-negotiable, than in a real movie. In hindsight, it's no wonder that Lionsgate was desperate to only show press the film at an advanced 'fan event' screening put on by AMC Theatres, and that the film's embargo was only lifted as soon as the first Thursday, May 15, showtimes were underway.
That's not enough to bury a film that feels so keen to bury itself in the process of its story unfolding, as there really isn't much beyond the presence of Ortega and Keoghan to keep anyone with a pulse invested. Even those actors, gifted by all accounts, are blown off the screen by Tesfaye's naked performance, but not in the way that up-and-coming actors tend to in their breakout roles. No, The Weeknd is simply terrible as himself, ironically, exhibiting no understanding of what it means to portray even a lightly fictionalized character. But that might have more to do with there being nothing to really play: Abel Tesfaye may be an extremely talented singer with demons, but that doesn't mean he's any good at embodying them on screen, nor that they were worth putting on screen for damn-near two hours. Kudos to him for getting a major movie studio to back his own vanity project, I guess, but as the lyrics of 'Hurry Up Tomorrow' state, they'll likely have to be the ones to pay for his sins in the end.
Hurry Up Tomorrow is currently playing in theaters courtesy of Lionsgate.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Associated Press
36 minutes ago
- Associated Press
Key moments from the fourth week of Sean 'Diddy' Combs' sex trafficking trial
NEW YORK (AP) — The fourth week of Sean 'Diddy' Combs ' sex trafficking trial featured testimony from the second of two ex-girlfriends who are crucial witnesses in the government's quest to prove sex trafficking and racketeering conspiracy charges against the hip-hop mogul. Combs, the founder of Bad Boy Records, has pleaded not guilty in the trial, which resumes Monday. Here are key moments from the past week: Hotel worker says Combs sought video of Cassie beating Fearing career ruin, Combs delivered $100,000 in cash to a security guard for a Los Angeles hotel in return for assurances that he was given the only security footage of Combs' 2016 attack on then-girlfriend Casandra 'Cassie' Ventura, the security guard testified. Eddy Garcia, 33, recounted how the deal came to be, saying he first heard from a fast talking, stuttering and 'very nervous' Combs on a phone call seeking to obtain the video of him kicking and dragging Cassie from the hotel's elevator bank into a hallway because 'if this got out it could ruin him.' Days later, Garcia said, he was the nervous one when he was greeted in an office building by a smiling Combs who called him 'Eddy, my angel' before Garcia turned over a USB drive containing the security footage. Combs then made him sign a nondisclosure agreement promising it was the only copy of the video and that Garcia would never speak of it, he said. Then, Combs, with a bodyguard at his side, fed stacks of cash from a brown bag into a rectangular money counter machine until it reached $100,000, Garcia said. He said he pocketed $30,000 and gave $50,000 to his boss and $20,000 to another hotel security guard. Garcia testified under immunity. A recording of the hotel attack on Cassie aired on CNN last year and security footage along with clips of the security tape recorded by a guard on his personal phone so he could show it to his wife have been shown repeatedly during the trial. Judge threatens Combs with trial expulsion Minutes after a prosecutor complained that Combs was seen 'nodding furiously' as his lawyer cross examined a witness on Thursday, Judge Arun Subramanian took a look himself and said he saw Combs 'nodding vigorously and looking at the jury' and doing the same later when the lawyers and the judge were having a sidebar discussion. Assistant U.S. Attorney Maurene Comey said prosecutors were concerned because the gestures amounted to 'testifying by nodding affirmatively' while his lawyer asked questions. During a lunch break, defense lawyer Marc Agnifilo promised to speak with Combs and ensure it wouldn't happen again after the judge told him it was 'absolutely unacceptable.' The judge sternly responded: 'If it happens again, if it happens even once, I will hear an application from the government to give a curative instruction to the jury, which you do not want. Or I will consider taking further measures, which could result in the exclusion of your client from the courtroom.' Mia says she was 'brainwashed' to send Combs loving texts after rape A former Combs personal assistant who testified under the pseudonym 'Mia' told jurors that Combs had sexually assaulted her multiple times over her eight-year career, though the attacks were 'random, sporadic, so oddly spaced out' so that she thought each was the last. She said he first molested her and forcibly kissed her at his 40th birthday party before raping her months later in a guest room at his Los Angeles home. On cross examination, defense lawyer Brian Steel's suggested that she fabricated her claims to cash in on 'the #MeToo money grab against Sean Combs.' Steel confronted her with loving texts she sent Combs long after her employment ended and asked how she could tell him, as she did in a 2019 text, that she had imagined Combs rescuing her from a nightmare in which she was trapped in an elevator with R. Kelly, the singer who has since been convicted of sex trafficking. 'I was still brainwashed,' Mia explained. Defense has success with questioning of Cassie's friend The defense had one of its most successful moments of the trial when attorney Nicole Westmoreland cast doubt on the credibility of a graphic designer who says Combs once dangled her from the balcony of a 17th-floor apartment in Los Angeles. Bryana 'Bana' Bongolan, a friend of Cassie who is suing Combs, had taken a cellphone image of a softball-size welt on her leg that she said occurred when Combs held her over the balcony for 10 to 15 seconds and then threw her into furniture. After it was shown to the jury, Westmoreland showed the jury cellphone metadata revealing that the photograph was taken while Combs was on tour in September 2016, staying at a Manhattan hotel. 'You agree that one person can't be in two places at the same time?' Westmoreland asked. 'In, like, theory, yeah,' Bongolan responded. 'You're not sure?' Westmoreland asked. 'Hard to answer that one,' she said. Later, Bongolan said she did not recall the exact date, but she had no doubt the balcony episode happened. Woman recalls sex performances during three years as a Combs' girlfriend A woman testifying under the pseudonym 'Jane' fought through tears and sobs to recount frequent sexual performances she participated in with male sex workers to please Combs and keep their three-year relationship alive until his September arrest. Jane's testimony, which is likely to continue deep into next week, is identical in many ways to the four-day testimony in the trial's first week by Cassie. Jane said she never wanted to have sex with other men but did it to please Combs because she loved him. Cassie described having hundreds of drug-fueled sexual performances known as 'freak-offs' in which she had sex with male sex workers for days at a time while Combs watched, sometimes directed the activity, and pleasured himself. Jane described having nearly the same experiences from 2021 until last August, though she called them 'hotel nights.' She said her relationship with Combs began with romance but later became reliant upon the sexual performances, especially after Combs began paying rent for her apartment. Defense attorneys have insisted that Jane and Combs only engaged in consensual sex and that Jane's protests to Combs in text messages were fueled by jealousy.

Associated Press
36 minutes ago
- Associated Press
Why a Minneapolis neighborhood sharpens a giant pencil every year
MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — Residents will gather Saturday in a scenic Minneapolis neighborhood for an annual ritual — the sharpening of a gigantic No. 2 pencil. The 20-foot-tall (6-meter-tall) pencil was sculpted out of a mammoth oak tree at the home of John and Amy Higgins. The beloved tree was damaged in a storm a few years ago when fierce winds twisted the crown off. Neighbors mourned. A couple even wept. But the Higginses saw it not so much as a loss, but as a chance to give the tree new life. The sharpening ceremony on their front lawn has evolved into a community spectacle that draws hundreds of people to the leafy neighborhood on Lake of the Isles, complete with music and pageantry. Some people dress as pencils or erasers. Two Swiss alphorn players will provide part of this year's entertainment. The hosts will commemorate a Minneapolis icon, the late music superstar Prince, by handing out purple pencils on what would have been his 67th birthday. In the wake of the storm, the Higginses knew they wanted to create a sculpture out of their tree. They envisioned a whimsical piece of pop art that people could recognize, but not a stereotypical chainsaw-carved, north-woods bear. Given the shape and circumference of the log, they came up with the idea of an oversized pencil standing tall in their yard. 'Why a pencil? Everybody uses a pencil,' Amy Higgins said. 'Everybody knows a pencil. You see it in school, you see it in people's work, or drawings, everything. So, it's just so accessible to everybody, I think, and can easily mean something, and everyone can make what they want of it.' So they enlisted wood sculptor Curtis Ingvoldstad to transform it into a replica of a classic Trusty brand No. 2 pencil. 'People interpret this however they want to. They should. They should come to this and find whatever they want out of it,' Ingvoldstad said. That's true even if their reaction is negative, he added. 'Whatever you want to bring, you know, it's you at the end of the day. And it's a good place. It's good to have pieces that do that for people.' John Higgins said they wanted the celebration to pull the community together. 'We tell a story about the dull tip, and we're gonna get sharp,' he said. 'There's a renewal. We can write a new love letter, a thank you note. We can write a math problem, a to-do list. And that chance for renewal, that promise, people really seem to buy into and understand.' To keep the point pointy, they haul a giant, custom-made pencil sharpener up the scaffolding that's erected for the event. Like a real pencil, this one is ephemeral. Every year they sharpen it, it gets a bit shorter. They've taken anywhere from 3 to 10 inches (8 to 25 centimeters) off a year. They haven't decided how much to shave off this year. They're OK knowing that they could reduce it to a stub one day. The artist said they'll let time and life dictate its form — that's part of the magic. 'Like any ritual, you've got to sacrifice something,' Ingvoldstad said. 'So we're sacrificing part of the monumentality of the pencil, so that we can give that to the audience that comes, and say, 'This is our offering to you, and in goodwill to all the things that you've done this year.''

Associated Press
36 minutes ago
- Associated Press
How groundbreaking gay author Edmund White paved the way for other writers
NEW YORK (AP) — Andrew Sean Greer, a Pulitzer Prize-winning novelist, remembers the first time he read Edmund White. It was the summer of 1989, he was beginning his second year at Brown University and he had just come out. Having learned that White would be teaching at Brown, he found a copy of White's celebrated coming-of-age novel, 'A Boy's Own Story.' 'I'd never read anything like it — nobody had — and what strikes me looking back is the lack of shame or self-hatred or misery that imbued so many other gay male works of fiction of that time,' says Greer, whose 'Less' won the Pulitzer for fiction in 2018. 'I, of course, did not know then I was reading a truly important literary work. All I knew is I wanted to read more. 'Reading was all we had in those days — the private, unshared experience that could help you explore your private life,' he said. 'Ed invented so many of us.' White, a pioneer of contemporary gay literature, died this week at age 85. He left behind such widely read works as 'A Boy's Own Story' and 'The Beautiful Room Is Empty' and a gift to countless younger writers: Validation of their lives, the discovery of themselves through the stories of others. Greer and other authors speak of White's work as more than just an influence, but as a rite of passage: 'How a queer man might begin to question all of the deeply held, deeply religious, deeply American assumptions about desire, love, and sex — who is entitled to have it, how it must be had, what it looks like,' says Robert Jones Jr., whose novel above love between two enslaved men, ' The Prophets,' was a National Book Award finalist in 2021. Jones remembers being a teenager in the 1980s when he read 'A Boy's Own Story.' He found the book at a store in a gay neighborhood in Manhattan's Greenwich Village, 'the safest place for a person to be openly queer in New York City,' he said. 'It was a scary time for me because all the news stories about queer men revolved around AIDS and dying, and how the disease was the Christian god's vengeance against the 'sin of homosexuality,'' Jones added. 'It was the first time that I had come across any literature that confirmed that queer men have a childhood; that my own desires were not, in fact, some aberration, but were natural; and that any suffering and loneliness I was experiencing wasn't divine retribution, but was the intention of a human-made bigotry that could be, if I had the courage and the community, confronted and perhaps defeated,' he said. Starting in the 1970s, White published more than 25 books, including novels, memoirs, plays, biographies and 'The Joy of Gay Sex,' a response to the 1970s bestseller 'The Joy of Sex.' He held the rare stature for a living author of having a prize named for him, the Edmund White Award for Debut Fiction, as presented by the Publishing Triangle. 'White was very supportive of young writers, encouraging them to explore and expand new and individual visions,' said Carol Rosenfeld, chair of the Triangle. The award was 'one way of honoring that support.' Winners such the prize was founded, in 2006, have included 'The Prophets,' Myriam Gurba 's 'Dahlia Season' and Joe Okonkwo's 'Jazz Moon.' Earlier this year, the award was given to Jiaming Tang's ' Cinema Love,' a story of gay men in rural China. Tang remembered reading 'A Boy's Own Story' in his early 20s, and said that both the book and White were 'essential touchpoints in my gay coming-of-age.' 'He writes with intimate specificity and humor, and no other writer has captured the electric excitement and crushing loneliness that gay men experience as they come of age,' Tang said. 'He's a towering figure. There'd be no gay literature in America without Edmund White.'