5 Seconds Of Summer - The Feeling Of Falling Up... đ
Since exploding onto the scene in 2014 as the punk-lite protĂ©gĂ©s of One Direction, the band has been in a perpetual state of âfalling upwards.â They fell into stadiums. They fell into arenas. They fell into critical acclaim with the surprise 2020 album CALM . But with each upward swing came a gravitational pull: burnout, creative doubt, the erosion of private selfhood.
Released in September 2022, 5SOS5 was a record born from chaos. Written and recorded in the eye of the COVID-19 pandemic, the album found Luke Hemmings, Michael Clifford, Calum Hood, and Ashton Irwin scattered across the globe, separated from each other and the roar of the crowd for the first time in a decade. The result was their most mature, sonically diverse, and emotionally raw work to date. But to truly understand the album, you have to watch the film. 5 Seconds of Summer - The Feeling of Falling Up...
In a career defined by sharp left turnsâfrom pop-punk pranksters to arena-rock heartthrobs to synth-pop experimentalistsâ5 Seconds of Summer have never stood still. But with their fifth studio album, 5SOS5 (pronounced âFive Seconds of Summer fiveâ), and its companion documentary The Feeling of Falling Upwards , the band did something they had never quite allowed themselves to do before: they stopped running. Since exploding onto the scene in 2014 as
The âfalling upwardsâ motif appears literally: upside-down shots of the band walking on ceilings, floating in swimming pools, drifting through zero-gravity simulators. Itâs a visual metaphor for the pandemic-era feeling of time slipping sideways. They are successful, yes, but they are also untethered. In an era of manufactured pop docsâpolished, approved, and drained of frictionâ The Feeling of Falling Upwards feels radical because itâs uncomfortable. The band members cry on camera. They admit to resenting each other. They talk about wanting to quit. They laugh at their own younger selves with a tenderness that borders on grief. But with each upward swing came a gravitational
The answer, according to 5 Seconds of Summer, is that you donât stop falling. You just learn to recognize the feeling. You name it. You write a song about it. And then, you fall upwards again, together.
The Feeling of Falling Upwards , a 50-minute documentary directed by the bandâs own Michael Clifford alongside Andy DeLuca, is not a traditional "making of" feature. Itâs a confessional booth. Itâs a therapy session. Itâs a scrapbook of anxiety, triumph, and the strange vertigo of achieving everything you dreamed of, only to realize youâre not sure who you are anymore. The title itself is a paradox. Falling upwards suggests a contradictionâa descent that looks like ascent. For 5SOS, that feeling is deeply familiar.


