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1[[quoteright:310:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/love_and_mercy_2014_poster.jpg]]
2
3->''"I'm Brian Wilson. From the Beach Boys?"''
4
5''Love & Mercy'' is a 2014 American {{Biopic}} focusing on the life of Music/BrianWilson, directed by Bill Pohlad and starring Creator/JohnCusack, Creator/PaulDano, Creator/ElizabethBanks, and Creator/PaulGiamatti.
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7In the mid-1960s, Brian Wilson (Dano) is riding high. As the talented LeadBassist and songwriter of Music/TheBeachBoys, he enjoys both wealth and success. However, a panic attack on an airplane, along with the release of Music/TheBeatles' ''Music/RubberSoul'', prompts him to give up touring and stay in UsefulNotes/{{California}}, crafting a more experimental, personal album with no filler called ''Music/PetSounds''. But while making the intended follow-up ''Music/{{Smile|TheBeachBoys}}'', Wilson's mental health takes a downward turn, as drugs and stress drive him past the brink of sanity...
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9Wait, that description isn't entirely truthful.
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11In the mid-1980s, Brian Wilson (Cusack) is an EmptyShell controlled by his abusive doctor, legal guardian, and [[TheSvengali svengali]] Dr. Eugene Landy (Giamatti). Separated from his friends and family, he seems adrift under the watchful eye of Landy until he meets Cadillac saleswoman Melinda Ledbetter (Banks), who [[FlorenceNightingaleEffect falls in love with him]] [[{{Determinator}} and works to get Landy out of his life]]...
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13Confused? Well, to put it more succinctly, ''Love & Mercy'' [[TwoLinesNoWaiting jumps back and forth between these two plots]] in order to tell the story of Brian Wilson's life and music and how they're affected today.
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15----
16!!''Love & Mercy'' provides examples of:
17* TheSixties: For the first half.
18* TheEighties: For the second half.
19* AbusiveParents: Murry Wilson, just like in real life. He beat the Wilson brothers, is disappointed when he hears "God Only Knows" for the first time, seems more interested in a new band he manages, [[spoiler: and dispassionately reveals that he sold the back catalog for $750,000, pushing Brian into his HeroicBSOD.]]
20* AdaptationalAttractiveness: Graham Rogers, who stands 6-feet-tall, plays the 5-foot-4 Al Jardine. And in what appears to be a running theme in Beach Boys/Brian Wilson biopics, Carl Wilson, who was notably chubby as a younger man, is played by someone of average build (in this case, Brett Davern).
21* AnachronicOrder: As said above, the film cuts back and forth between the two stories. However, it's easy to follow.
22* ArtisticLicenseHistory: While the film is mostly able to stay accurate to real-life events, it did take some liberties:
23** The film makes it seem that Brian Wilson went to work on ''Pet Sounds'' right after he had his breakdown on the plane. In reality, he also made [[Music/TheBeachBoysToday three]] [[Music/SummerDaysAndSummerNights more]] [[Music/BeachBoysParty albums]] between the breakdown and the ''Pet Sounds'' sessions (''Music/BeachBoysParty'' was actually produced during the early ''Pet Sounds'' sessions as a stop-gap release when Capitol Records demanded a new album for the Holiday season).
24** The film portrays Brian Wilson as having written "Good Vibrations" ''after'' the ''Pet Sounds'' sessions. He actually wrote "Good Vibrations" either before or during the ''Pet Sounds'' sessions with lyrics by Tony Asher, and was even intended for the album. It was scrapped because Brian wasn't happy with it at the time and later approached Music/MikeLove to write new lyrics for the song, where it was released as a hit single.
25** In the film, it's stated that the rest of the Beach Boys went on to record ''Music/SmileySmile'' without Brian's involvement. He was actually heavily involved in the album's production, and the album was actually his idea. He even set up a home studio to record the album.
26** The film has Murry Wilson sell the publishing rights to the Beach Boys' catalog right after the collapse of the ''[=SMiLE=]'' sessions. He actually sold the rights after the release of ''Music/TwentyTwenty'', the band's final album on Capitol Records.
27*** A minor example but in the film, Murry sold the rights for $50,000 more than what he actually sold them for.
28** In a scene where Brian is recording "Caroline, No", Murry comes in to brag about his new band The Sunrays' single "I Live for the Sun" that had just been cut and how it's guaranteed to be a #1 hit. By the time Brian even got around to recording ''Pet Sounds'', "I Live for the Sun" had been out for a while, and for anyone curious, it only topped out at #51.
29** The background studio chatter in "Here Today" is portrayed as deliberate in the film. In reality, it was an oversight due to a rushed mixing job, and the chatter was omitted from the stereo release.
30** Melinda was portrayed in the film as being directly responsible for beginning the lawsuit against Brian's therapist Eugene Landy. While she definitely played a part in freeing Brian from Landy by reporting him to the state attorney general, it was actually a woman named Kay Gilmer, Landy's publicist, who gathered the evidence that began the lawsuit.
31** Carl Wilson's role in getting Brian away from Landy is extremely underplayed. In the movie, Carl is portrayed as something of a bystander, unaware of Landy's treatment of Brian, and doesn't appear onscreen in the 1980s timeline. In real life, he despised Landy and resented his control over Brian.
32* BadassCrew: The Wrecking Crew, the real life session musicians Brian hired in order to help make ''Pet Sounds'' and ''Smile''.
33* BeardOfEvil: Mike Love.
34* BunnyEarsLawyer: {{Deconstructed|Trope}} with Brian. While he may be a musical genius, his unconventional, perfectionist attitudes combined with drug abuse and a worsening mental state lead to his decades-long HeroicBSOD.
35* CommanderContrarian: Mike Love. When the rest of the band returns from Japan and hears ''Pet Sounds'' for the first time, they all somewhat approve of it. Mike is less impressed and wants the music to be StrictlyFormula.
36* CreatorBreakdown: InUniverse, after his panic attack, Brian–Past slowly starts to succumb to his schizophrenia over the production of ''Pet Sounds'' and ''Music/{{Smile|TheBeachBoys}}''.
37* {{Determinator}}: Melinda tries her hardest to find some way to get Landy out of Brian–Future's life [[spoiler: and succeeds.]]
38* DistinctionWithoutADifference:
39-->'''Brian–Future''': "People always say I spent [[HeroicBSOD two years in bed]]. They were wrong. I spent ''three'' years in bed."
40* TheDragon: An interesting example. Landy's assistants seem more concerned regarding Brian than Landy does.
41* DoctorJerk: Landy.
42* EarnYourHappyEnding: Brian–Future ends up free from Landy's control, marries Melinda and finally finishes ''Smile''.
43* EmptyShell: Brian–Future is an over-medicated mess of a man who has everything out of his control.
44* EurekaMoment: After Brian–Past plays the melody for "Good Vibrations" for hours on end, he has a conversation with Mike and mentions something about animals being able to pick up vibes from people.
45* FauxAffablyEvil: Gene Landy can be fairly charismatic but is definitely not to be trusted.
46* FauxDocumentary: The studio scenes when ''Pet Sounds'' is being recorded are meant to invoke this.
47* FlorenceNightingaleEffect: Melinda falls in love with Brian–Future partly because he's a desperate man yearning for freedom.
48* ForegoneConclusion: Anyone who's familiar with the Beach Boys' history will already know that Melinda helped Brian–Future break free from Landy's control in 1992 and married him three years later.
49* HearingVoices: Brian.
50* HeroicBSOD: The 1980s plotline shows him slowly getting out of it. The 1960s plotline shows HowWeGotHere.
51* IJustWriteTheThing: Brian–Past states how his music is a manifestation of what he hears in his head.
52* InNameOnly: Mike is peeved that ''Pet Sounds'' really only has The Beach Boys' voices on them instead of playing their instruments.
53* IncessantMusicMadness: Mike Love is not a fan of working on "Good Vibrations" for months on end.
54-->'''Brian''': Okay, one more time please, "KUH-kuh-kuh, KUH-kuh-kuh, KUH-kuh-kuh"--\
55'''Mike''' [''exploding'']: "kuhkuhkuhkuhkuh!" They're doing it! Brian, they've been doing it for the past three hours!\
56'''Brian''': Okay, Mike, you can leave if you don't want to be here, thank you, I'm working with the cello players.
57* ItWillNeverCatchOn: Music/MikeLove is dismissive of ''Pet Sounds'' and Brian's father Murry outright tells him that in five years, no one will remember him or the Beach Boys.
58* {{Jerkass}}:
59** Murry Wilson, as seen under AbusiveParents.
60** Music/MikeLove counts as well. He takes an ItWillNeverCatchOn approach to ''Pet Sounds'', is relieved when the album becomes an AcclaimedFlop and writes and records ''Music/SmileySmile'' with a StrictlyFormula approach.
61* KindlyHousekeeper: Brian–Future's housekeeper Gloria [[spoiler: who plays a key part in helping Melinda free him from Dr. Landy]].
62* ManicPixieDreamGirl: While Melinda has a more down-to-earth personality than most examples of this trope, she still gets Brian–Future free from Landy's control.
63* ManipulativeBastard: Dr. Landy.
64* ModestyBedsheet: Brian–Future and Melinda have a lengthy scene together while covered in bedsheets.
65* MushroomSamba: While we don't see much of it, Brian's description of his first time trying LSD is very trippy.
66* ThePerfectionist: Brian's attitudes lead to him alienating the rest of The Beach Boys.
67* PsychoPsychologist: In the 80s, Brian being left in the care of a crazy, [[TheSvengali controlling]] psychologist Dr. Landy who leaches off his finances and fame, isolates him from his family and drugs him heavily, all while his family is none the wiser (and even thinks that he's ''helping'' Brian) until Melinda intervenes.
68* RuleOfPool:
69** Brian–Past hops in a pool fully clothed during a celebration at a party. During a meeting with the band, he also dives in fully clothed.
70** Brian–Future and Melinda jump off a boat and swim to shore fully clothed.
71* SanitySlippage: Brian's gradual state during the 60s. Everyone around him realizes that it's happening, and even Brian himself realizes that he's losing his mind, helpless to stop it.
72-->'''Carl Wilson''': "I'm worried about you, brother."
73-->'''Brian–Past''': "I think I might be losing it..."
74-->'''Dennis Wilson''': "I don't blame you. There's a lot to lose out there."
75* ScrewThisImOuttaHere: When The Beach Boys and Van Dyke Parks host a poolside meeting to discuss Brian–Past's behavior, the latter mentions how [[TeenGenius he's been writing music since he was 14]], then promptly leaves.
76* ShownTheirWork: The movie makes an effort to show photos, videos and studio methods as accurately as possible.
77* StrictlyFormula: Mike Love's approach to songwriting imposed on Brian.
78* TheSvengali: Landy. He's shown to clearly mooch off Brian–Future's wealth and tries to get him to obey his every command.
79* SupportingProtagonist: While Brian is consistently the focus, the 1980s sections are mostly told from Melinda Ledbetter's perspective.
80* ThirdWheel: Dr. Landy and his son either chaperone or outright spy on Brian–Future's time with Melinda.
81* ToplessnessFromTheBack: We briefly see Melinda from the back before she covers up with a ModestyBedsheet.
82* TrippyFinaleSyndrome: When Melinda works to get Landy removed, a psychedelic montage occurs involving '80s Brian (known as "Brian–Future"), '60s Brian (known as "Brian–Past") [[spoiler: and Brian as a young child.]]
83* WellDoneSonGuy: Brian, and, to a lesser degree, his brothers.
84* WordSaladLyrics: Mike's put off by Brian–Past and Van Dyke writing ''Music/{{Smile|TheBeachBoys}}'' with this in mind.

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