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Since exploding onto the scene in 2014 as the punk-lite protégés of One Direction, the band has been in a perpetual state of “falling upwards.” 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.

The “falling upwards” motif appears literally: upside-down shots of the band walking on ceilings, floating in swimming pools, drifting through zero-gravity simulators. It’s 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 docs—polished, approved, and drained of friction— The Feeling of Falling Upwards feels radical because it’s 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. 5 Seconds of Summer - The Feeling of Falling Up...

For fans who grew up with 5SOS—who were teenagers when “She Looks So Perfect” dropped and are now navigating their own 20-something crises—the documentary is a mirror. It asks: What does it mean to keep going when the dream comes true and still feels like a struggle? Since exploding onto the scene in 2014 as

In a career defined by sharp left turns—from pop-punk pranksters to arena-rock heartthrobs to synth-pop experimentalists—5 Seconds of Summer have never stood still. But with their fifth studio album, 5SOS5 (pronounced “Five Seconds of Summer five”), 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. But with each upward swing came a gravitational