![]() ![]() Turns out that in that interview he perfectly described how the planned movie would turn out.Ĭ: Hey Brett, how are you doing? I guess we haven’t spoken in a while, I guess not since “Chicago 10,” which was a long time ago.īrett Morgen: Well, I’ve been busy. Add to that some rare home movies made of Kurt and Courtney Love in the years before his death and the first-ever on-camera interviews with Kurt’s mother, father and sister, the people who knew Kurt for longer than anyone else, and you have a film with unprecedented access into the mind of the artist who was taken from this world far too soon while still at the height of his fame.Ĭ got on the phone with Morgen last week to talk about how the doc came about and were surprised to learn he remembered the last time we spoke in 2007 when he was already hard at work on Montage of Heck and telling us how it was going to be different from A.J. ![]() Morgen is probably best known for his 2002 doc The Kid Stays in the Picture, a portrait of Hollywood producer Bob Evans that helped redefine visually what could be done within the documentary format, and he’s used similar techniques in Montage of Heck to bring Kurt Cobain’s private never-before-seen notebooks full of writing and art to life. ![]() It took nearly eight years to make, but Brett Morgen’s definitive Kurt Cobain doc, Kurt Cobain: Montage of Heck, finally gives fans of the Nirvana singer who took his own life in April 1994 an inside look into Cobain’s true personality through his own art, music, personal writings and home films. ![]()
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