Well, yes. A film about Blur. A documentary about Blur. A film-documentary about Blur, about their history, filled with difficulties, successes, disappointments, alcohol, love, hate, unions, separations, drugs, and above all, music obviously; their music in which they deeply believe.
An important film, let's say it right away, because it is a snapshot of a period that spans from the early '80s to the late '00s, told through the eyes and words of Albarn, Coxon, James, and Rowntree; enriched with often beautiful images edited in a truly captivating way.
Captivating, indeed, and fast, innovative, never boring. It's not the usual self-congratulatory documentary pointless in itself; here, there is absolutely nothing self-congratulatory.
After all, with the dirty and compelling documentary "Starshaped" they had already warned us: "se famo un documentario o' famo strano ma con classe". And indeed.
There are the very first concerts that ended with Albarn throwing up behind the drums after just 4 songs, there's the absolute non-conformity of Coxon, a true anti-rockstar, already an alcoholic during the post "The Great Escape" period and disgusted by many aspects of the system yet not losing his loose and amused tone for this, there's "Beetlebum" which is finally revealed to be a song about "a period of life compromised by heroin".
The focus then shifts, of course, to the reasons why Coxon left the group in '02 in the middle of the "Think Tank" recordings and the other three continued without him. The story lingers on their moving decision to return to playing together for the pleasure of playing together, maybe for the last time.
And then the "trash," as Coxon calls it, of the "blur/oasis" rivalry, Albarn's panic attacks and his depression that led him to write many of the songs on "13", the fights among the four during the hardest periods of their journey because, as James says, "sometimes it's easier to hit someone than to tell them to shut up." Or Coxon, who, drunk, destroys the bus that was taking them on tour during their dramatic 1992, with Rowntree laughing, remembering how watching that scene at that moment was damn sad.
In the background, the socio-cultural-musical context of an era (the story, I repeat, starts from 1980 because it was during that period the four from Colchester met).
The film keeps you there, glued to the screen. And that's no small feat.
A necessary film, definitive in some way because it shows everything that needed to be shown about one of the most important bands of the last 20 years and, I repeat, without any sterile and boring self-celebration.
A band that has never lost its (enormous) talent, but that has never lost even its characteristic, precious irony and the desire to never take itself too seriously.
Tracklist and Lyrics
01 No Distance Left to Run (03:28)
It's over
You don't need to tell me
I hope you're with someone who makes you feel safe in your sleep.
Being tonight
I won't kill myself trying to stay in your life
I've got no distance left to run
When you see me
Please turn your back and walk away
I don't want to see you
Cos I know the dreams that you keep
That's where we meet
When you're coming down think of me
I got no distance left to run
Ohhhh, ohhhh, ohhhh, ohhhh, ohhhh, ohhhh
It's over
I knew it would end this way
I hope you're with someone who makes you feel that this life is a life
One that settles down
Stays around
Spends more time with you
I got no distance left to run
I'm coming home
So cold
Home
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