Amy Winehouse movie Back to Black leaves Netflix users unimpressed

Just a few months after its cinema run, the Amy Winehouse biopic is now available to stream on Netflix.

Marisa Abela as Amy Winehouse in Back to Black, which has just been added to Netflix. (StudioCanal/Focus Features/Alamy)
Marisa Abela as Amy Winehouse in Back to Black, which has just been added to Netflix. (StudioCanal/Focus Features/Alamy)

Back to Black arrived in cinemas earlier this year as the latest example of the wave of music biopics that has brought us the likes of Bohemian Rhapsody, Rocketman, and the upcoming Robbie Williams CGI monkey movie. Now, it's streaming on Netflix — Back to Black, not the monkey movie.

On the one hand, this is a great chance for those who missed the movie during its cinema run to catch up on it. However, on the other, it's a chance for Amy Winehouse fans to revisit all of the things the film did wrong in their eyes. It's fair to say that Netflix subscribers haven't fallen head over heels in love with Back to Black.

The film stars Industry's Marisa Abela as Amy Winehouse, tracing her rise to fame in the Camden music scene, as well as her romance with Blake Fielder-Civil — played by Jack O'Connell. Of course, the film also depicts her high-profile struggles with addiction and her eating disorder.

Jack O'Connell and Marisa Abela in Back to Black. (StudioCanal/Focus Features/Everett Collection)
Jack O'Connell and Marisa Abela in Back to Black. (StudioCanal/Focus Features/Everett Collection)

When the movie hit cinemas in April, reviewers weren't kind. Back to Black currently has an approval rating of just 35% on review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes. However, in our own review at Yahoo, we wrote: "It is a serviceable biopic, and though it doesn't stand out quite as much as its subject did during her lifetime it retells Winehouse's story with care and that is something to celebrate."

Read more: Amy Winehouse Deserves More Than 'Back to Black' (TIME)

Now that the film has landed on Netflix, it's picking up a new audience and, based on what people have said on social media, that audience isn't very keen on the movie. One viewer explained: "I really didn't want to hate it, but I did, for all the reasons most people who liked Amy hated it."

Another viewer wrote that, even after just 10 minutes, the film was "the most jarring thing I’ve watched in a long time". A third viewer tweeted that the film "basically reduces Amy Winehouse to I’m just a girl, standing in front of a guy, asking him to love her", but conceded that the acting is great.

Read more: Amy Winehouse movie Back to Black fails to hit the right note (Digital Spy)

It wasn't all bad news, though, with one viewer explaining that the movie had given them a new appreciation for Winehouse's work. They said: "I never really vibed with Amy Winehouse music but just watched the Netflix movie doc thing and suddenly realised I like the lyrics of some of the songs, I've always liked the woman just think the songs were massively over played."

Back to Black has received very mixed reviews from both critics and audiences. (StudioCanal/Focus Features/Alamy)
Back to Black has received very mixed reviews from both critics and audiences. (StudioCanal/Focus Features/Alamy)

Back to Black will continue to divide viewers as more and more people see it on Netflix. But there's no denying that the movie did okay at the UK box office, where it earned more than £12m. Globally, though, it struggled and its worldwide total sits at just $51m (£39m).

It feels as if this wave of music biopics is passing. Certainly, nothing in the last few years has matched up the cash and awards hoovered up by Bohemian Rhapsody, despite the critical drubbing it received in some quarters. The only thing that can save the genre now is Robbie Williams and his CGI monkey. Watch this space.

Back to Black is streaming on Netflix now.