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  • They Should Call Them ROCKumentaries!

    Like me, Agnes Varnum of IndieWire saw a whole lot of music documentaries at the recent South By Southwest Film Festival, and like me, her ass probably got pretty tired doing it.  Even if you aren't straddling both sides of the movie critic/film critic fence, or particularly fond of the you-got-your-chocolate-in-my-peanut-butter synergy of music and film that SxSW is peddling, you can't help but notice that there are more rock documentaries (and rap documentaries, and jazz documentaries, and minimalist concert music documentaries) being made than ever before, and, as Varnum puts it, "2008 will be the year of the music doc".

    With the question of what out of the way, though, we have to approach the question of why.  While it's nice that some of these films are being made -- especially ones that painstakingly gather together footage and concert material from influential, if lesser-known, musical figures, as with The Upsetter, the Lee "Scratch" Perry doc that tipped at SxSW this year.  And it's undeniably a good thing when a masterful filmmaker like Martin Scorsese turns his hand to the job for a band he really cares about, like in Shine a Light.  But there's such a flood of rock docs these days that you have to wonder if it's not so much a golden age of musical documentaries as it is another manifestation of the document-everything zeitgeist that's been made possible by media oversaturation and cheap, easy access to digital cameras.  Fifty years from now, is anyone going to care about the brief eruption of the microgenre of nerdcore?  As much as I loved them, is Tad really worth making a feature-length documentary about?  Has everyone already seen all the great movies in the history of film, that they can spare the time to see an hour and a half-long documentary about Harry Potter-inspired "wizard rock"?  

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  • SXSW Review: "The Upsetter: The Life & Music of Lee 'Scratch' Perry"

    Reggae, dub & ska are extremely popular musical genres with documentarians, and it can be hard to believe that any figure in Jamaican music hasn't already been covered in film to the point of oversaturation.  This would seem to be especially true of Lee "Scratch" Perry, perhaps the towering figure of dub music and one of pop music's all-time mad geniuses.  So influential in the world of Jamaican music is Perry that he's been featured in nearly every single film or television documentary about it, but amazingly enough, this is the first one to focus on him exclusively -- a fact that's almost unbelievable given the reach of his five-decade career.

    The Upsetter, written and directed by Ethan Higbee and Adam Bhala Lough, certainly can't be accused of not paying its subject the proper respect.  The filmmakers are almost uncannily attuned to Perry's colossal reputation -- to a fault, in fact:  they treat Perry, whose appeal rests largely on a sly sense of humor and a reputation as a bit of a crazy, with a degree of whispering awe that verges on the reverential.  While his contributions to the world of music certainly justify such treatment, treating Perry like a messenger of Jah kind of takes the fun out of his music.  Higbee and Lough likewise don't really want us to think of Perry as nuts, as if his being nuts in any way detracts from the brilliance of his creations, and they go a bit out of their way to try and illustrate that he's just operating on some sort of higher spiritual plane.  There's also the common problem of music documentaries:  with a limited amount of screen time, you can't give too many minutes to the most appealing thing about them:  their music.  The Upsetter's 93-minute runtime is barely enough to cover one of Lee Perry's groundbreaking albums, and too much of it is handed over to big names like Paul McCartney and the Beastie Boys, who pontificate about how great Perry is at the expense of playing his actual music, which would prove it beyond a shadow of a doubt.

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