The Ecstasy of Wilko Johnson review – a sparkling tribute to a diamond geezer | Wilko Johnson | The Guardian Skip to main contentSkip to navigationSkip to navigation
Wilko Johnson
A splendid life … Wilko Johnson
A splendid life … Wilko Johnson

The Ecstasy of Wilko Johnson review – a sparkling tribute to a diamond geezer

This article is more than 8 years old

The Dr Feelgood guitarist holds forth winningly on life, love and the prospect of death in Julien Temple’s affectionate portrait

Wilko Johnson featured significantly in Julien Temple’s documentary Oil City Confidential, and it’s a treat to spend more time with him via this tribute to one of the great diamond geezers of British rock music.

The guitarist from Dr Feelgood and other beat combos (and occasional Game of Thrones executioner), Wilko is irrepressibly energetic, holding forth on life, love, the universe and above all the prospect of death.

Watch the trailer for The Ecstasy of Wilko Johnson – review

Diagnosed with a seemingly inoperable pancreatic cancer, he opts to live out his remaining days playing music (he records an album with old mate Roger Daltrey in eight days) and appreciating beauty where he finds it. “I’ve had a splendid life,” he says without self-pity, and it’s hard not to agree. (In a remarkable turn of events, he has since been given the all-clear.)

Keeping to form, Temple scissors into the interview shots snippets culled from stock footage and archive material and films such as A Matter of Life and Death and The Seventh Seal. Stylistically, t’s a bit of a retread for Temple but it’s impossible to begrudge him his affection for his subject.

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