It was brilliant Irene. Saw it the other day and felt like going into my work the next day donning a fedora hat, trenchcoat, eyeliner and nail varnish. Lol .
This was one of the best interviews with Brett Morgen I’ve seen. You understand the film and what the director was trying to achieve. I’ve seen the film twice now and was spellbound both times. I was able to re-experience the excitement and magic of when I first discovered Bowie in 1972. One of the best movies I have ever seen.
It's an amazing David Bowie experience seen through the eyes of Director Brett Morgan. I loved it, the sound is incredible and the visuals hang on that like a piece of art. It also reminded me why I create music and art and where my influences come from and that life as an experience is limited. Make the most your time here.
I get why it doesn't mention his death, but why skip his creative output throughout the 90's and after. Still loved it very much, it made me into a massive admirer.
Watched it a week back and it was over indulgent, too long and repeated the same quotes, theme and stuff all throughout the 2 hour 20 minute run time. Some nice visuals tho
⚡David Bowie is an amazing innovator who blows minds with his discoveries. ⚡Brett Morgen's film is amazing, revealing its essence with the structure of the very essence of Bowie, and also explodes consciousness. ⚡The interview was amazing, the right approach, interesting topics and the right reflection
He tossed plenty of COOL tidbits for the Bowie obsessive in the film. Listen for the chords of all the young dudes, sung in syllables, which was run backwards to get that cool vocal chord motif in “Move On”. I had always heard it was done but dang it I know it’s backward amd all but the voices and syllables are different. Heard it in the film.
Caotic and boring, most of the footage was already available on youtube, this documentary is a very lazy attempt on showing off Bowie. People that don't know Bowie after the movie will get more confused and learn little about the man. my vote as a Bowie fan 4/10, what a mess !!
@@erinstark5450 I also loved it and this is coming from someone who has always liked Bowie, but wasn't a hardcore fan of him or anything. My mother was with me in the cinema, and she actually is a hardcore Bowie fan, and she loved it as well.
He spent 2 years just reviewing the raw material. 5 years all up in the making. Worked 18 hours a day for 1st few years. Not avail on RUclips. He’s not lazy. You got it wrong. Sorry
a wasted opportunity full of old clips .that everyone has seen hardly any rare footage.nothing from 72/76/ nothing from the early years.nothing from tin machine.no 1990 footage only one clip from 74.No early concert footage.an complete and utter joke.
I think they definitely do touch on Bowie’s death, just not with narration. I mean the line “something happened the day he died, his spirit rose a meter and stepped aside. . .” I saw it as allowing Bowie himself to break the news to us. It was (wether or not intentional?) brilliant.
The Movie doesn't mention Bowies death because he isn't dead.......he lives on in our hearts!
Just from these ten minutes, I can already tell Brett not only knows Bowie, but understands him perfectly. I can't wait to see this
The slight glimpse we get at an older Bowie when he sings "ain't that just like me?" Gave me goosebumps
Sweet thing 1974. 💕 🕊️ 🕊️
My Blackstar tattoo reminds me to keep creating. It’s an inspiration. Bowie is an inspiration. This film is an inspiration. It was wonderful.
It was brilliant Irene. Saw it the other day and felt like going into my work the next day donning a fedora hat, trenchcoat, eyeliner and nail varnish. Lol .
I also have a Blackstar tattoo! It’s so special.
moonage daydream is a masterpiece.
This was one of the best interviews with Brett Morgen I’ve seen. You understand the film and what the director was trying to achieve. I’ve seen the film twice now and was spellbound both times. I was able to re-experience the excitement and magic of when I first discovered Bowie in 1972. One of the best movies I have ever seen.
It's an amazing David Bowie experience seen through the eyes of Director Brett Morgan. I loved it, the sound is incredible and the visuals hang on that like a piece of art. It also reminded me why I create music and art and where my influences come from and that life as an experience is limited. Make the most your time here.
I'm seeing this film on the 18th of Sept and I am really looking forward to it. I really do hope I like it.
Thank you Brett, you made not my day, but something nearly as my live at making this movie I'd say, I needed it... thanks
I get why it doesn't mention his death, but why skip his creative output throughout the 90's and after. Still loved it very much, it made me into a massive admirer.
Halo Space Boy was strong segment.
Great interview
He can't Die
In the film, The fallen astronaut and black star video is all the discussion of his death we need, really.
Is that Wes Anderson with a scruff beard.
Watched it a week back and it was over indulgent, too long and repeated the same quotes, theme and stuff all throughout the 2 hour 20 minute run time. Some nice visuals tho
Thoughtful questions for Mr. Morgan. I have been enamored by Bowie off and on since high school 40 years ago. So excited to see this film
A Starman..What is a Starman?..A Starman is.....is....er....er...He's an Apollo "Moon-age Daydream"...David's special gift 🎁 to us was his music 🎶❤️
great interview Ben, congrats and thank you. g'day from Sydney. Subscribed!
⚡David Bowie is an amazing innovator who blows minds with his discoveries.
⚡Brett Morgen's film is amazing, revealing its essence with the structure of the very essence of Bowie, and also explodes consciousness.
⚡The interview was amazing, the right approach, interesting topics and the right reflection
He tossed plenty of COOL tidbits for the Bowie obsessive in the film. Listen for the chords of all the young dudes, sung in syllables, which was run backwards to get that cool vocal chord motif in “Move On”. I had always heard it was done but dang it I know it’s backward amd all but the voices and syllables are different. Heard it in the film.
Ho visto il film!grazie Brett!!!stupendo!❤️🔝⚡️⚡️⚡️⚡️⚡️
How about he explains why there's no tin machine
69 years!!!
Caotic and boring, most of the footage was already available on youtube, this documentary is a very lazy attempt on showing off Bowie. People that don't know Bowie after the movie will get more confused and learn little about the man. my vote as a Bowie fan 4/10, what a mess !!
For what it’s worth, I loved it. I forgot I was a human on Earth while watching it. Sorry it was wasn’t the same for you.
@@erinstark5450 I also loved it and this is coming from someone who has always liked Bowie, but wasn't a hardcore fan of him or anything. My mother was with me in the cinema, and she actually is a hardcore Bowie fan, and she loved it as well.
Let's see your documentary then.
@@jamespeters3430 let's see Paul Allen's documentary
He spent 2 years just reviewing the raw material. 5 years all up in the making. Worked 18 hours a day for 1st few years. Not avail on RUclips. He’s not lazy. You got it wrong. Sorry
a wasted opportunity full of old clips .that everyone has seen hardly any rare footage.nothing from 72/76/ nothing from the early years.nothing from tin machine.no 1990 footage only one clip from 74.No early concert footage.an complete and utter joke.
I think they definitely do touch on Bowie’s death, just not with narration. I mean the line “something happened the day he died, his spirit rose a meter and stepped aside. . .”
I saw it as allowing Bowie himself to break the news to us. It was (wether or not intentional?) brilliant.