Image: Tina Tiller
Image: Tina Tiller

Pop CultureMarch 1, 2024

Blink-182 have pissed off the wrong New Zealand city

Image: Tina Tiller
Image: Tina Tiller

The recent cancellation of the Christchurch Blink-182 concert and an inflammatory comment from the lead singer have left locals asking: what’s my consumer rights again?

Pop punk bad boys Blink-182 have enraged Christchurch fans to the point of potential legal action after cancelling their sold out concert two weeks prior to the gig, and then exclaiming “Fuck Christchurch” while onstage in Australia this week. The events have elicited strong reactions in the community, with people referring to them as “Stink 182”, “fucking douches” and “absolute time wasters” online. “Fuck Christchurch? Fuck you,” one Redditor wrote.

“Twenty years down the drain with my fave band to have them shit all over my home.”

Christchurch mayor Phil Mauger has even weighed in on the drama, telling The Press that he has “a few choice words” for the band behind songs such as ‘Dysentary Gary’. “The printable version is that it’s very disappointing,” he said. Blink-182 fan and Christchurch resident Kate was slightly less restrained than the mayor. “Honestly, fuck them,” she told The Spinoff. “It makes them look like sellout dicks who aren’t really there for the music and the fans.”

Tom DeLonge will certainly NOT be enjoying a Rollickin’ Gelato any time soon

Kate said the comment has not just put her off listening to Blink-182’s music, but has also deterred her from wearing the “stupid meme shirt” she bought on RedBubble to surprise her husband on the night of the concert. “Now I’ve got this dumb T-shirt that I’m never going to wear,” she said of the garment, emblazoned with the phonetic lyrics of ‘I Miss You’ (“Jone waste yore toye monme yorall rediii the voice inside moye yedd”).

Although Kate has been left out of pocket on a cheap novelty T-shirt, other fans have potentially lost thousands on travel and accommodation for the now-cancelled gig. And, following the comments in Australia, it appears that some disgruntled purchasers could be funnelling their rage into the Disputes Tribunal. “I feel a few small claims wins coming on for people who might want to get compensated for travel and accommodation,” wrote one Reddit user, receiving 69 upvotes.

While the Ōtautahi Disputes Tribunal could not disclose the details of any current Blink-182-based claims, citing privacy, they did confirm to The Spinoff that this situation “is likely to be something the Tribunal would consider.” Jessica Walker of Consumer NZ told Newstalk ZB that Christchurch fans could “have a go” at spending $45 to lodge a claim. “It’s worth seeing if you can get your money back under the consumer guarantees act, or the fair trading act,” she said.

All the small things could really add up, she added, with the $45 fee potentially returning up to $2000 back if required. While Kate is ineligible for a refund on the cost of her RedBubble T-shirt (she’s already washed it), she is in full support of any potential legal action taken by her fellow Blink-182 fans. “I love it,” she said. “We’re petty here and we’re very used to filing EQC claims – we know how to fill out a form and we know how to get litigious real quick.”

Kate’s “stupid” Blink-182 T-shirt

Kate’s own personal act of vengeance on behalf of Christchurch? Spotting Blink-182 singer Tom DeLonge in the crowd at the Taylor Swift Eras concert in Australia, and “flipping him a side eye.” She noted that he was only there for a short time, treating it “like pre-drinks” and appeared “totally carefree” despite deeply letting down his loyal fans across the ditch. “Things happen, cancellations happen, but the way you speak to your fans about it really matters,” she added.

“I just think they’ve underestimated Christchurch, that we are just a nothing place with a weird name. And we do have a weird name – but we’re not nothing.”

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Lyric Waiwiri-Smith
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Cohen Holloway as Joe Middleton in Dark City: The Cleaner
Cohen Holloway as Joe Middleton in Dark City: The Cleaner

Pop CultureMarch 1, 2024

Review: Dark City is an eerie, pitch black and totally original Christchurch crime drama

Cohen Holloway as Joe Middleton in Dark City: The Cleaner
Cohen Holloway as Joe Middleton in Dark City: The Cleaner

Our second post-Covid big budget drama following After the Party is stylish, unsettling and extremely impressive, writes Duncan Greive.

We open on expansive shots of a version of Christchurch, gleaming bright and a little too pretty. The setting of Dark City: The Cleaner has an unmistakable comic book quality, with artfully unreal newspapers and brands, pristine 70s busses and hi-fi equipment, while cellphones and modern cars make it clear this isn’t a period piece. There’s affable narration from Joe Middleton (Cohen Holloway), the titular cleaner, talking us through his affection for the city.

Then, in one of many queasy twists, Middleton is revealed to be not just our guide for the series, but also the unctuous serial killer stalking the city’s young women. Holloway dominates the series, on-screen or talking us through almost every scene – the series inevitably lives or dies on his performance. 

Mercifully he’s superb in (almost) every way. His skin is damp and mottled, his hair lank – physically he perfectly embodies the socially awkward, hyper-repressed Middleton, who works as a janitor at a police station and is thus privy to every beat of the futile investigation into the murders he’s been committing for two years. Holloway’s performance is brilliantly contained, he’s deferential to the point of servility, struggles to meet the cops’ eyes and is disgusted by the affection of his colleague Sally Galletly (a quietly compelling Dea Doglione).

Still, due to his narration, we’re always in Middleton’s world – an uncomfortable situation. He’s an affable murderer of beautiful and wholly innocent women, and for long stretches of the first episode you naturally wonder whether Dark City is going to be content to just show us Middleton’s perspective. For parts of the first episode, we’re lulled into thinking it will be content to live as a stylish twist on some familiar tropes. Middleton’s mum is awful and he ticks many other serial killer 101 traits, while the cops are vaguely hapless. 

It would be the kind of edgy narrative device common in 90s movies and 00s HBO-ish dramas, while also being deeply out of step with contemporary mores. Yet just when the plot starts to get over-familiar, a journalist named Melissa Flowers (a scene-stealing, almost show-stealing Chelsie Florence) appears for a deliciously unhinged scene that completely upends Dark City’s carefully cultivated order, while entirely living up to its name.

Chelsie Florence in Dark City: The Cleaner (Image: Supplied)

It’s just in time for the end of the first episode, and completely explodes your expectations, moving it into the same kind of macabre universe as the likes of Killing Eve. Middleton has to switch from control to vulnerability, and the plot is further destabilised by the apparent arrival of a copycat killer onto the scene. The show is based on a series of novels by Christchurch crime writer Paul Cleave, and it’s to his credit that it manages to walk such a narrow line between the familiar and the riotously unhinged.

Reviewers have only been supplied the first two episodes, but on that basis this feels like another big win for Te Puna Kairangi. It’s a special fund established during Covid to bolster the local screen industry, and it validates a thesis which has been floating around untested for years: that if you give our drama creators more money, you’ll get a far superior product. 

It’s birthed a clutch of well-received shows, including The Gone and Far North. Dark City is the first to arrive since the debut of After the Party, arguably the best TV drama we’ve ever made. It’s an imposing act to follow, and it’s to the show’s credit that it doesn’t suffer too much by comparison. It really is a step above the vast bulk of what we’ve made – Rick Jacobsen’s assured direction and the enjoyably extra performances of the leads ensure that at its best it’s riveting, coal-dark and gasp-inducing. 

Dark City does have some flaws. The first is an occasional tendency for the writing to drift into hollow cliché – an interrogation scene in episode two featuring two longtime Shortland Street actors unavoidably recalled the soap, courtesy of hoarsely yelled lines lacking the finesse of many other moments. A much more significant issue is Holloway’s narration, which has a deadpan blankness that sucks the energy out the first episode at times. 

Cohen Holloway in Dark City: The Cleaner (Image: Supplied)

He offers such frequent monologues that it verges on Peep Show’s level of interiority of character, but lacks for either the comic delivery nor craft of that (admittedly all-time great) show. That said, the device becomes less relied upon and thus less intrusive over time, so viewers should persist with it even if it jars. 

Why? Because what’s good about Dark City is original and electrifying. It’s one of what Sky are terming “Sky Originals” – along with the rebrand of Prime to Sky Open, it’s the company’s most ambitious attempt yet to draw much closer to the local conversation in Aotearoa. Dark City is a huge swing for all involved, and despite some uneven moments, when the show really connects it’s wildly impressive – further evidence that when given the space and funding, our television can elevate to any bar we care to set for it.

Dark City: The Cleaner begins March 4 on Neon, Sky Go, and SoHo.