Reviewed by: On Your Markus

Review by Markus Hamence | 07 March 2026

At the Adelaide Fringe, originality is currency – and ‘Silence of the Jams II: Lack of Judgement Day‘ cashes in on a brilliantly off-beat concept that sits somewhere between cult cinema, live gig and a wonderfully eccentric fever dream.

Fronted by the delightfully rogue creative force Eddie Ray, this genre-blending spectacle is a live music cinema experience where a film unfolds on screen while the soundtrack is performed live by The Band of Legends. the result is a high-energy hybrid that feels part rock concert, part comedy sci-fi adventure and entirely freakin’ Fringe.

The story spins a cheeky dystopian yarn set in a future where the internet has taken complete control and artificial intelligence rules the planet. Humanity is lost inside a digital illusion – until a lone rebel cowboy emerges to fight the machines with the one weapon they can’t algorithmically replicate: live music.

That premise alone sets the tone for the night. The show leans heavily into absurdity, mixing spaghetti-western swagger with retro sci-fi parody. Think a cinematic mash-up where Tarantino-style grit collides with the playful Australian weirdness of Yahoo Serious. It’s knowingly ridiculous – and that’s exactly why it works.

The live band is the beating heart of the performance. Rather than simply accompanying the film, they inject personality and pulse into every scene. Funk grooves, rock riffs and comic timing transform the screening into something far more alive than traditional cinema. The audience becomes part of the ride, reacting in real time as the story barrels through its wild-west-meets-tech-apocalypse plot.

Eddie Ray himself is a charismatic ringleader, a total champ. His on-stage presence radiates a rebellious, anti-tech charm – fitting for a show about unplugging from digital overload. There’s a playful sincerity beneath the satire too: the message that music, connection and creativity still matter in an increasingly artificial world.

What makes ‘Silence of the Jams II‘ such a Fringe gem is its fearless originality. It’s scrappy, imaginative and slightly unhinged – the exact energy that defines Adelaide Fringe, where thousands of artists descend on the city each year to experiment and entertain.

This isn’t polished mainstream theatre, and it doesn’t try to be, it doesn’t want to be. Instead, it thrives on its cult-film spirit, its live-band punch and its refusal to fit neatly into any category.

If you like your Fringe shows bold, oddball and fuelled by live music, this is a ride worth taking.

Wrap-up:

‘Silence of the Jams II’ is a gloriously strange mash-up of cinema, satire and rock-driven storytelling – proof that sometimes the loudest way to fight the future is with a band, a screen and a seriously big imagination. A banger!