A documentary about David Bowie's final two albums "The Next Day" (2013) and "Blackstar" (2016) and Broadway musical "Lazarus".A documentary about David Bowie's final two albums "The Next Day" (2013) and "Blackstar" (2016) and Broadway musical "Lazarus".A documentary about David Bowie's final two albums "The Next Day" (2013) and "Blackstar" (2016) and Broadway musical "Lazarus".
- Awards
- 3 nominations total
David Bowie
- Self
- (archive footage)
Featured reviews
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Conceptually, it works as intended:
Bowie, from the perspective of those who worked with him and loved him. And there is more joy than sadness here.
No fluff, no glorification, just a true to life account of a creative genius' last 5 years, true to himself until the very end.
You will never get a full picture from Bowie. It's up to you to figure out the puzzle, and it's beautiful.
This captures a great artist writing the final verses of his song.
He shows us who is was is who he is.
Proof of sick wisdom.
He shows us who is was is who he is.
Proof of sick wisdom.
This is an interesting documentary about Bowie, however it is not what I had hoped for. Mostly it is interviews with people he worked with giving snippets of Bowie's personality, music and actions from way back. I don't understand where the "Last Five Years," comes into play. They show clips from as far back as they could find them. Also, it is rather disjointed with going from one phase of his career to the other, back and forth, back and forth, trying to perhaps contrast his styles, I suppose. If you are a huge Bowie fan, you will love it. If you liked his music simply for the music's sake, it will bore you.
Last five years of the great star's life, but really a review of his career with studio versions of his songs played over obscure live footage.
Most interesting thing I took from it is the Major Tom element. At one point Bowie says it was his internal dialogue made manifest, then there's an image of a skeleton orbiting in space, then a skeleton discovered inside a spacesuit, then an adaptation of Heroes for Lazarus, then screw heads for eyes over a bandage in a death bed. You had to be there.
Overall: engaging, gets more interesting in the end.
Most interesting thing I took from it is the Major Tom element. At one point Bowie says it was his internal dialogue made manifest, then there's an image of a skeleton orbiting in space, then a skeleton discovered inside a spacesuit, then an adaptation of Heroes for Lazarus, then screw heads for eyes over a bandage in a death bed. You had to be there.
Overall: engaging, gets more interesting in the end.
But all in all it was a good little documentary. The first few minutes made me cry as well as the last few with Tony Viscounti. When he isolates David voice and you hear his breath...I lost it. I was born in the 70's so I didn't get to experience David in his early years so this was nice. He is and will remain my #1.
Did you know
- TriviaDavid Bowie never talks to camera, just comments some events as narrator.
- Quotes
[last lines]
Interviewer: And legacy. What? How would you like your legacy written?
David Bowie, Himself: I'd love people to believe I really had great haircuts.
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- Also known as
- David Bowie: De fem sista åren
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
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