Documentary Review Moonage Daydream

Moonage Daydream (2022) 

Directed by Brett Morgen 

Written by Documentary 

Starring David Bowie 

Release Date September 16th, 2022 (Limited Release), September 23rd Everywhere 

Documentary filmmaker, director Brett Morgen, has a gift for fans of David Bowie. It's arguably the greatest gift Bowie fans could receive that isn't a visit from the Thin White Duke himself from beyond the grave. Moonage Daydream is the very first documentary to be approved by the estate of David Bowie. It includes footage from the Bowie archives that has never seen the light of day. Concert footage from the late 70s, movie projects that Bowie himself commissioned but never finished, and rare interviews with Bowie that provide narration amid the dazzling, dizzying, and mesmerizing sonic and visual spectacle. 

Moonage Daydream doesn't so much work in a perfectly linear fashion. Though it does tell us about Bowie's childhood, in his own words, it's not a straight ahead documentary narrative. Rather, the focus of Moonage Daydream is Bowie the icon, the music and the man. The documentary is wall to wall with Bowie music and performances with Bowie himself offering narration about where his life was at the time he created this music via a series of interviews. Whether its appearances on Dick Cavett or a British chat show, Bowie consistently, shyly offers insights into himself and his work that aren't nearly as revealing as the music he creates. That's by design. 

While interviewers were hung up on Bowie's makeup, outfits and shoes, Bowie appears baffled by the questions and the attention to his attire. He appears perfectly ready to discuss the philosophy and inspiration behind his music but clams up, rather appropriately as he's constantly questioned about his look and how unusual he is. Questions about his sexuality and his influence on his fans lead Bowie to a confused sort of bemusement that stops these interviews in their tracks. It's both charming and frustrating, charming from Bowie and frustrating that crusty interviewers can't get past Bowie's flamboyance to talk about Bowie's art. 

Far more successful is a female interviewer, I apologize for not catching her name amid the disorienting experience of Moonage Daydream, who gets Bowie talking love. It's a wonderfully nuanced and thoughtful conversation that plays as a piece of narration in Moonage Daydream. Similarly, when Bowie talks about falling in love with his wife, Iman, the obvious joy in his voice is just wonderful even as his happiness plays at odds with his still wandering spirit which cannot settle on a sound and a rather cynical worldview that led Bowie's years in the wilderness of popular culture. 

Brett Morgen does a brilliant job of approaching the dichotomy of Bowie, the superstar and the artist, conflicted about success but desperate for the fleeting comfort of superstardom. There is a brilliant segment of Moonage Daydream that covers the most successful period of Bowie's career, his 80s yuppie phase. Let's Dance, Modern Love, and other top hits of that time are fantastic but even Bowie admits that he was playing the hits, playing what he thought people wanted to hear, and reveling in the trappings of being wildly successful. 

Click here for my complete review of Moonage Daydream at Beat.Media. 



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