'The Idea of You's August Moon gives us the boy band bops we deserve

"Dance Before We Walk" is the song of the summer.
By Belen Edwards  on 
All products featured here are independently selected by our editors and writers. If you buy something through links on our site, Mashable may earn an affiliate commission.
August Moon performing onstage at Coachella against a starry backdrop.
Band of the year! Credit: Alisha Wetherill / Prime

Welcome to Thanks, I Love It, our series highlighting something onscreen we're obsessed with this week.


Did rom-com The Idea of You leave you breathless? Like you could dance before you walk? Like you want to get "Closer" to love and get a better "Taste" of what life has to offer? If so, there's only possible explanation: You've been Mooned.

That's right, you are now a Moonhead, a fan of The Idea of You's fictional boy band, August Moon. The film sees 24-year-old August Moon lead singer Hayes Campbell (Nicholas Galitzine) fall for 40-year-old art gallery owner Solène (Anne Hathaway). And where their love goes, boy band bops are sure to follow.

The Idea of You boasts several original August Moon songs, including the sweet, strummy "Closer" and the bouncy, cheeky "Taste." And we can't forget "Dance Before We Walk," Hayes Campbell's anthemic solo debut about starting anew. These songs — and the many others that pop up throughout The Idea of You — feel ripped right from the radio during a boy band's golden years. They beg for fans to scream along to them at a sold-out stadium tour. For the team behind The Idea of You, that sense of believability was crucial.

"We wanted the music to feel grounded, like this was a band that was approachable," The Idea of You music supervisor Frankie Pine told Mashable in a video interview. "The approachability of this band was also a part of the story... If they were too flashy, normal folks like ourselves wouldn't go up and talk to them. But if they're approachable, it allows for us as the normal audience to feel like we can go up and have that conversation with them. That was probably the most important sellable aspect that we needed, because we needed the connection between our two lead characters to be real."

That sense of approachability meant that there was no room for pastiche or parody in the film's music. "I treated August Moon and Hayes Campbell like real people and a real band," music producer Savan Kotecha told Mashable in a video interview. Kotecha, who has written songs for artists like Ariana Grande, Britney Spears, and the Weeknd, produced the songs for The Idea of You and co-wrote them with Carl Falk.

Kotecha and Falk also co-wrote One Direction's smash hit "What Makes You Beautiful," a notable connection given that Robinne Lee, author of The Idea of You, cited Harry Styles as inspiration for the character of Hayes. However, One Direction was not a musical inspiration for the songs in The Idea of You, nor were any other major boy bands.

"When 'Dance Before You Walk' came out, people said, 'This gives me a One Direction feel,' and I thought, 'It's probably because it's me and Carl Falk, and we have fun when we write these pop songs,'" Kotecha explained. "But it's great to hear, and I hope that people will feel nostalgic, and it reminds them of those times."

Hayes Campbell from "The Idea of You" performs onstage at Coachella, holding his microphone out to the audience.
Nicholas Galitzine in "The Idea of You." Credit: Alisha Wetherill / Prime

Nostalgia also played into shaping the sound and performance style of August Moon. There would be no playing into trends that would immediately date the music on release, no showy tricks or intense dance breaks.

"The trick was not to make all the songs feel super current," Kotecha explained. "My own personal theory on boy bands, even when you think back to New Kids on the Block, is that they shouldn't sound like what's happening now on the radio."

The guideline, then, for August Moon became "guilty pleasure pop songs." And with his years of experience in the music industry, including writing with boy bands, Kotecha found it helpful to sort out a chronology for August Moon's discography, including which songs could fit on each of their albums.

Mashable Top Stories
Stay connected with the hottest stories of the day and the latest entertainment news.
Sign up for Mashable's Top Stories newsletter
By signing up you agree to our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy.
Thanks for signing up!

The teenybopper ballad "I Got You" — which sees the August Moon boys telling a listener not to worry about "comments" or what she sees on her "timeline" — functions as August Moon's first big single off their debut album. Kotecha envisioned it as the kind of song a record label would give a boy band who was just starting out. In fact, he had "I Got You" in his back pocket for a while before finding a place for it in The Idea of You.

August Moon's second album sees the release of sexier — but still fairly boy band clean — songs like "Taste," with tongue-in-cheek lyrics like: "I got dinner on the plate/It's gonna have to wait/'Cause I'm going straight for my dessert." For August Moon's third album, Kotecha imagined the band would actually be writing their own songs. The result? Bangers like "Guard Down," which examines the pitfalls of fame and features guitar riffs and drums that fit perfectly into The Idea of You's crowd-pleasing August Moon Coachella performance.

The musical centerpiece of the film remains "Dance Before We Walk," where a newly solo (and single) Hayes sings how he's "off the moon, and I'm hittin' the ground like a rocket." We hear snippets of it throughout the film, as Hayes plays it on the piano and guitar, and Solène encourages him to write it. For Kotecha and Pine both, it remains their favorite song from the film, and the most representative of Hayes' journey to finding himself outside August Moon.

"It proves that Hayes is more than a cute face in a boy band," Pine said. "He has depth, he has things he wants to say, and I loved showing the progression of what that's like as a songwriter."

When it came to actually recording the songs, Kotecha and Pine both sang the praises of Galitzine. For starters, his voice was key to understanding what shape the August Moon songs would actually end up taking. "If they'd cast an amazing R&B singer, for example, that would have changed where we went with the music," Kotecha said. "But Nick has a great rich pop tone, so that told us which lane we should play in."

"Nick is a pro and brought so much to the table vocally," Pine said. "Typically, when you have an actor, the singing can be a brand-new thing for them, so you tell them how to sing a line, and they'll just sing the line. But Nick really came in prepared, knowing exactly how Hayes Campbell would have sung that song."

With a tight recording schedule, there wasn't enough time to get all the August Moon actors into the studio. Galitzine is leading every song, with Kotecha stepping in as second lead. "He did what we would normally do in three weeks in three days," Kotecha said of Galitzine.

On top of running an Instagram page for the band, The Idea of You released three August Moon singles in the lead-up to its release: "Dance Before We Walk," "Closer," and "Taste." For Kotecha and Pine, the reaction has been exhilarating.

"I was at the L.A. screening [of The Idea of You] the other day, and there were August Moon fans outside the theater," Kotecha said. "It's just been so fun, seeing people with August Moon shirts and bracelets and posters that they make. Hopefully it just continues."

"There's nothing better than having a fictional band actually make the charts," Pine said.

You heard them — stream August Moon!

The Idea of You is now streaming on Prime Video. The Idea of You soundtrack is now streaming.

Topics Film

A woman in a white sweater with shoulder-length brown hair.
Belen Edwards
Entertainment Reporter

Belen Edwards is an Entertainment Reporter at Mashable. She covers movies and TV with a focus on fantasy and science fiction, adaptations, animation, and more nerdy goodness.


More from Thanks, I Love It
Will Lestat return on 'Interview with the Vampire'?
Sam Reid is Lestat in "Interview with the Vampire: Part II."

Benjamin Bratt's 'Loot' cameo has us swooning
Benjamin Bratt and Maya Rudolph in "Loot."

'Ripley' vs. 'The Talented Mr. Ripley': The tiny change that makes a big impact
Andrew Scott stars as Tom Ripley in "Ripley."


Talking trash with 'Problemista's Tilda Swinton and Julio Torres
Julio Torres and Tilda Swinton play misfits in New York City in "Problemista."

Recommended For You
The farthest-away pictures of Earth ever taken
An arrow pointing to the Earth (a blue dot) with Saturn's rings in the foreground.

There's a library on the moon now. It might last billions of years.
The moon, zoomed in on a landing site, with a disk covered in smaller colorful disks

The best WFH gear for staying focused, keeping fit, and getting stuff done
fitbit, standing desk, and loftie alarm clock on grid background


How 'The Idea of You' movie compares to the book
Hayes Campbell (Nicholas Galitzine) and Solene (Anne Hathaway) boarding a private jet in "The Idea of You."

More in Entertainment
How to watch the 2024 Emilia Romagna Grand Prix online for free
Charles Leclerc is driving the new SF-24 single-seater during Scuderia Ferrari's filming day

How to watch Mumbai Indians vs. Lucknow Super Giants online for free
By Lois Mackenzie
Mumbai Indians' Suryakumar Yadav



How to watch the 2024 Men's T20 World Cup online for free
Hardik Pandya of India during the ICC Men's T20 World Cup Semi Final match between India and England

Trending on Mashable

NYT Connections today: See hints and answers for May 16
A phone displaying the New York Times game 'Connections.'

NYT Connections today: See hints and answers for May 17
A phone displaying the New York Times game 'Connections.'

'Wordle' today: Here's the answer hints for May 16
a phone displaying Wordle

Cicadas love to land on people. Experts explain why.
The head of a cicada that emerged in 2021 as part of Brood X.
The biggest stories of the day delivered to your inbox.
This newsletter may contain advertising, deals, or affiliate links. Subscribing to a newsletter indicates your consent to our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. You may unsubscribe from the newsletters at any time.
Thanks for signing up. See you at your inbox!