Tag Archive: Brett Morgen


Freak Out! It’s a Moonage Montage

‘Moonage Daydream’ directed by Brett Morgen (USA, 2022)

While this movie is an all the hits celebration of David Bowie’s extraordinary life and times it is far from being a conventional music documentary. Filmmaker Brett Morgen instead painstakingly adopts a more impressionistic and eclectic approach which entails deliberately not being slavish to the chronological sequence of events. Viewers are bombarded with a head-spinningly kaleidoscopic mix compiled as if Morgen were suffering from ADHD. These include clips of German Expressionistic cinema, silent films, Kabuki theatre, contemporary dance, art works, city life and space travel.

The main impetus seems to be to try to capture the thrill of what it must have been like to be inside the head of David Bowie. Amid the chaos Morgen does find space for some more reflective detail which ironically proves to be equally, if not more, revealing. I would have happily watched the whole of the 12 minute  TV interview in 1979 with Mavis Nicholson.

Morgen’s audio-visual collage is most effective in scenes like a montage of dance moves from over the years to accompany a live performance of ‘Let’s Dance’. It does, however, produce forced and misleading juxtapositions. For instance, Bowie’s declared love for Iman, who he met in 1990, is sound-tracked by ‘Word On A Wind’, a song from the Station To Station album released 14 years earlier.

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KURT COBAIN: MONTAGE OF HECK directed by Brett Morgen (USA, 2015)

€12 is a bit steep for the price of a cinema ticket but this was billed as an ‘event’ rather than a straight movie so in the spirit of the theme I thought ‘What the heck!’

The montage of the movie’s title comprises a plethora of mostly unseen home movie footage. This gives the dubious privilege of watching Kurt Cobain grow up in public, starting out as a cute kid and ending as a jaded junky.

Debates will rage about when it all started to go wrong. Was it when his parents divorced?, Was it all down to his addiction to hard drugs? Was it his inability to cope with Nevermind’s overnight success? or Was it mitigated by his relationship with Courtney Love?

You could make a strong case that it was all or none of these.

The reality is that Cobain seemed to be born with a suicidal gene and the images essentially serve as a chronicle of a death foretold. You only have to see the scrawled writings and drawings to see how he lived and died as a tortured soul that those around him witnessed but were incapable of curing. Continue reading