The Craziest Thing About Song Sung Blue’s Ending Is That It Actually Happened
by Louis Peitzman · VULTURESpoilers ahead for the plot and ending of Song Sung Blue.
With a movie titled Song Sung Blue, you won’t be surprised to learn it hits a few sad notes. But that description actually undersells the pervasive melancholy of Craig Brewer’s new musical drama, based on the 2008 documentary of the same name, in which Hugh Jackman and Kate Hudson play Mike and Claire Sardina, the duo behind the Neil Diamond tribute band Lightning & Thunder. While Song Sung Blue is in many ways an inspirational story documenting the group’s unlikely success and Mike and Claire’s enduring love, it’s a much weirder and thornier film than a logline suggests. Even as it plays the biopic hits (not to mention several Diamond bangers), it glides over some seriously bizarre terrain, culminating in an ending that falls somewhere between Black Swan and All That Jazz.
The climax is drawn directly from the true story the film is based on, but Brewer’s take is hardly a documentary like the previous Song Sung Blue (2008). The biggest creative liberty the director takes in dramatizing the rise and fall of Lightning & Thunder is to drastically condense the timeline. What happened in reality over nearly two decades becomes three years in the lives of Song Sung Blue’s Mike (Lightning) and Claire (Thunder). The movie takes place at some point in the early-to-mid-’90s, the passage of time marked only by what Mike calls his sober birthdays, which he celebrates with performances of the title song that bookends the film. In the Hollywood adaptation of the Sardinas’ story, everything happens very quickly: Mike meets Claire, the two form Lightning & Thunder, and their meteoric ascent — at least as local Milwaukee rock stars — leads to the pair opening for Pearl Jam. Shortly thereafter, Song Sung Blue takes its first wild turn as Claire gets run over by a car on their front lawn, causing her to lose her left leg below the knee.
Yes, that is what really happened, again with some timeline tweaks. (In reality, the Pearl Jam concert was in 1995 and the accident in 1999.) But it’s here that Song Sung Blue begins to embrace moments of surrealism that feel Darren Aronofsky–adjacent. When Claire’s daughter, Rachel (Ella Anderson), arrives at the hospital in a panic over her mother’s condition, Mike reveals that his “jacked-up heart” is giving him trouble. Rather than call for a doctor, he instructs Rachel on how to defibrillate him back to consciousness after he passes out. Later, back at home, Claire struggles with her recovery. Amid a haze of pills, she suffers from depression and delusions. (It’s not Requiem for a Dream, but surely you understand the connection.) At one point, Claire crawls from her bed to what she believes is a stage, where she sinks back into her Patsy Cline–impersonator roots to perform “Sweet Dreams.” We discover she’s actually having a mental break on the front lawn, which leads to a brief stint in a psychiatric facility. This is harrowing material, and the more the movie depicts, the less tethered to reality it becomes. The scene in which Claire is nearly hit by a second car in front of their home plays like a dream sequence — but that too really happened. It was reported by local Milwaukee news with the chyron “Lightning Strikes Twice.”
The ending feels the most fictionalized despite also being mostly true to life. Lightning & Thunder make their comeback after Claire’s recovery and have just been offered their biggest gig yet, headlining a sold-out show at the Ritz. The performance is counterprogramming for the real Diamond, who’s doing a sold-out show of his own at the Wisconsin Center Arena the same night. Even if their audience will be filled with people who couldn’t snag tickets to the real thing, Lightning & Thunder believe this is the most important night of their lives — on top of the concert, they’re finally going to meet Diamond himself at a frozen-custard stand after their respective shows. As he practices in the bathroom mirror what he’s going to say to his idol, Mike has another cardiac event, which causes him to pass out and hit his head on the sink. Rather than call an ambulance, he superglues his wound and heads to the venue. The show is an unmitigated success, with Lightning & Thunder at last getting the rapturous audience they deserve. “I think tonight we were just as big as Pearl Jam,” Claire says in the car on their way to meet Diamond. When they arrive at the frozen-custard stand, she steps out to greet adoring fans but soon realizes Mike isn’t following behind. He has, in fact, succumbed to his head injury in the back seat.
The real Mike Sardina didn’t die until 2006, years after the movie takes place. Here’s how the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel reported on his death at the time: “A week before, he had fallen at home and struck his head, but did not want to go to a doctor or a hospital. He and his wife performed Saturday evening — pregame and post-game shows at the Madison Mallards baseball game — in Madison. Sardina became increasingly ill on the drive home to Milwaukee.” He was admitted to the hospital, where he slipped into a coma he never woke from. The cause, as doctors discovered, was bleeding in his brain. So while the movie fudges the details for dramatic effect, the broad strokes are shockingly accurate: Mike hit his head, chose to perform instead of seeking medical treatment, and died from his injury.
Of course, the ultimate success of a biopic is not how closely it hews to the events that inspired it. But given Song Sung Blue’s melodramatic plot beats, it’s hard not to feel jolted by just how based-on-a-true-story it is. Sometimes life really is a series of events so crazy it feels made up. At the same time, Brewer amplifies the film’s uncanny vibes with stylistic flourishes and visual allusions. When Mike emerges onto the stage with arms outstretched for what will be his last show, he looks, well, like Jesus. You could compare him to the title character of another Aronofsky film, The Wrestler, a Christ figure who sacrifices himself for one final performance. Like Black Swan’s Nina Sayers, Mike puts on the best show of his life while bleeding out. To its credit, Song Sung Blue has a much more sentimental heart than those films, and in the end, Mike seems driven less by his pursuit of fame or perfection than by his love for Claire. The film closes with moments of grace — first a funeral where Claire performs the Diamond deep cut “I’ve Been This Way Before” and then a scene where Mike’s stepson, Dayna (Hudson Hensley), sings along to a tape of Mike’s sober birthday song. Amid all the movie’s bold swings, there’s a closing reminder that the man who called himself Lightning was a real person with real loved ones left behind.