Upside Down: The
Creation Records Story. 2010. Danny O’Connor.
Upside Down opens with the seemingly obligatory montage that
presents a snapshot what is to come. Although in this case it is accompanied by
some ear splitting feedback that takes you out of the film instead of drawing
you in. It then segues into individual interviews with the participants of the
documentary in order to fill in the backstory of the film. This portion of the
film slumps into a protracted recounting of how they all met each other. The section
loses its pace and seems overly long perhaps because there are no interesting
stories about how or when they met. The section should have given way sooner to
the content that follows when something actually happens. Due to the subject of
the film there is a wealth of interviewees but in this case the polyphony has
the effect of making all the developments in the film indistinct and monotonous, there was no effort to make them distinct. The film is sound-tracked by the
music that is being discussed, this might give the film fidelity but the use of
early music from the bands is not conducive to easy viewing. But when this film
takes off and gets interesting is when the story takes off and coincidentally the
music improves. The interviews are used to give the footage that follows a specific
context (the footage itself would be useless without the context from the
interviews) the interviews in this case are entertaining and insightful as they
are firsthand. This film illustrates the complexities of a talking heads
interview.
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