Movie · 1978 · Drama, Music · 1h 54m · PG · English
Curator score: 5.9/10 (17.2K ratings)
His story will have you singing, laughing, crying, cheering, and stomping your feet
Overview
A chronicle of the rise and brief career of rock 'n' roll star Buddy Holly, who aspires to play music the way he wants it to sound. Holly and his band, the Crickets, are first invited to record in Nashville, where they encounter creative differences with the producing staff. Later they play a major booking at the Apollo Theater, scheduled there under the mistaken assumption that they're a black band. Holly's career eventually goes solo -- until the tragic day the music dies.
Ratings
Curator score: 5.9/10
IMDb: 7.3/10
Letterboxd: 3.52/5
Rotten Tomatoes: 100%
Metacritic: 78
TMDB: 7.2/10
Director
Steve Rash
Production
Innovisions, Columbia Pictures, Taurus Film
Cast
Gary Busey, Don Stroud, Charles Martin Smith, Conrad Janis, William Jordan, Maria Richwine, Amy Johnston, Dick O'Neill, Fred Travalena, Neva Patterson, Arch Johnson, John F. Goff, Gloria Irizarry, Jody Berry, Richard Kennedy, Jim Beach, Gailard Sartain, Albert Popwell, Paul Mooney, M.G. Kelly
Curator Review
Verdict
A sturdy, energetic rock biopic that works best as a performance piece: Gary Busey is unusually convincing as Buddy Holly, and the film benefits from letting the songs play out in full. It’s fairly conventional as a rise-and-fall music story, but the live-wire charisma and period energy make it an easy recommendation for fans of classic rock history and old-school studio biopics.
Best for
fans of music biopics
viewers who like performance-driven acting
classic rock and early rock 'n' roll fans
audiences who enjoy straightforward, feel-good rise-and-fall stories
Skip if
you want a psychologically deep or formally inventive biopic
you dislike conventional, by-the-book storytelling
you’re not interested in 1950s rock history
you prefer films that focus more on personal life than career milestones
Overview
The Buddy Holly Story is the kind of biopic that survives on momentum, charm, and a lead performance that feels bigger than the material around it. Gary Busey doesn’t just imitate Holly; he inhabits him with enough confidence and musicality to make the film feel alive whenever he’s on screen. The decision to let the actors do their own playing and singing pays off in a way that many later music biopics still struggle to match.
Worth noting
The film itself is more traditional than inspired, moving through the expected beats of breakthrough, industry friction, and tragic ending. It simplifies Holly’s life and keeps the emotional interior at a distance, but the pace is brisk and the concert sequences have real lift. There’s a pleasing sense of craft in how it treats the songs as complete performances rather than snippets.
Bottom line
What lingers is less a definitive portrait of Buddy Holly than a vivid reminder of how much promise was packed into such a short career. It’s not the deepest rock biopic, but it’s one of the most watchable, and it earns that by putting music and performance first.
Top Letterboxd reviews
Patrick Willems (3.5★) · 199 likes
It seems crazy to say this in 2019 but.......Gary Busey is really great as Buddy Holly.
Paul Schrader · 156 likes
FILM SONG PERFORMANCE. What actor gave the best performance of famous a singer on film? My vote goes to Gary Busey as Buddy Holly.
Quint75 (4★) · 151 likes
"Ooh-wee-ooh, I look just like Buddy Holly" - Gary Busey
carrieandtracy · 142 likes
Nobody’s ever confused The Buddy Holly Story with a great movie but Steve Rash made some canny decisions that pay huge dividends: the actors do their own playing and singing; they play songs all the way through, sometimes several in a row; the three leads are allowed to do their thing, and their thing constantly elevates a by-the-numbers biopic; interpretation is valued over impersonation. The energy is palpable. And Gary Busey…goddamn it, man. He was a great and profoundly charismatic film actor.
(RIP Mazeppa Pompazoidi. IYKYK.)
Alanna Why · 133 likes
Gary Busey as Buddy Holly: "The bus broke down, so we'll have to get a plane."
Me: "NOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!"