Police documentary: Stewart Copeland fights back
Filed under: Documentary, Music & Musicals, Sundance
On Day 2 of Sundance 2006, our own Jason Calacanis wrote a review of
Everybody Stares, a documentary by Police drummer Stewart Copeland about the band that was his life. The film
was cobbled together from Copeland's home movie footage, and Jason was less than impressed. He wrote:
"Documentaries rise and fall with their credibility, and this film feels as credible as a father cutting a son's
football highlights in slow motion to the Chariots of Fire soundtrack. Someone
should take this footage, add some objective 3rd parties commenting on The Police, and redo the voiceover to tell the
real story."That line rubbed Copeland the wrong way, and he commented on the post to let Jason know exactly how he felt.
"Yes," Copeland wrote. "That is just what it felt like to make this movie and you shouldn't be expecting anything more. I just don't have the shots you are looking for (sex and drugs) and maybe I forgot to pick up my camera during the shouting matches...Who would care about an "objective 3rd party commentary" on The Police? The band itself has been defunct for twenty years." Well, by that rationale, should anyone care about a non-objective Police documentary?
Check out Copeland's full comment after the jump.
Yes, that is just what it felt like to make this movie and you shouldn't be expecting anything more. I just don't have the shots you are looking for (sex and drugs) and maybe I forgot to pick up my camera during the shouting matches. But you can see, throughout my fifty hours of footage that we enjoyed each other's company and that strange stuff happened to us. Truth is, we liked each other. Your myth or mine?
Who would care about an "objective 3rd party commentary" on The Police? The band itself has been defunct for twenty years. This movie is about the ride. Could've been any band that conquered the world.
You have never seen these shots before. I'm sure that you are confusing my material with dramatic portrayals of life in a band, such as SPINAL TAP or ALMOST FAMOUS, and yes my non-fiction shots are uncannily similar. But that's the gag you fool! Our life was just like a movie but my footage is real. Figure that out.
Thanks for printing my poetry. It's not many drummers who get to see their verses in print.










Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
2-01-2006 @ 11:12PM
georgina elizondo buenfil said...
As a long follower of Stewart Copeland art, especially in music, I perceived he always is taking risks playing and innovating with new sounds.
Now Stewart Copeland as a filmaker take a risk again.
He is cutting with the old paradigm:
Rock & Roll = Sex & drugs.
I see he is not interesting to show human miseries related with rock & roll.
I like his proposal cause is new and better.
He associate Rock & Roll with positive attitudes and good feelings, that happened when his band The Police, conquered The World.
I am looking for things that give me hopes in humankind and I think I will find these in Stewart's film.
Also the movie could help me in my job, cause I have contact with teenagers and many of them are involving with music and rock bands.
Well, could be very interesting to show teens this rock docummentary as an example of how this trio (The Police) began from 0 and went on, until they reach together Top of the Tops charts.
You did it again Music Man.
Congratxxxx.
Keep on the beat.
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2-02-2006 @ 8:34PM
Maggie said...
I, for one, care VERY much about a non-objective Police documentary. I'd rather hear/see one of the three band members describe their experiences than someone who can't name more than three Police singles.
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