-
Skiing great Lindsey Vonn crashes at Crans-Montana, one week before Olympics
-
Slot warns Liverpool 'can't afford mistakes' in top-four scrap
-
Paris show by late Martin Parr views his photos through political lens
-
Artist chains up thrashing robot dog to expose AI fears
-
Alcaraz outlasts Zverev in epic to reach maiden Australian Open final
-
French PM forces final budget through parliament
-
French-Nigerian artists team up to craft future hits
-
Dutch watchdog launches Roblox probe over 'risks to children'
-
Trump brands Minneapolis nurse shot dead by federal agents an 'agitator'
-
Israel says killed 'three terrorists' in Gaza
-
After Trump-fueled brawls, Canada-US renew Olympic hockey rivalry
-
Eileen Gu - Olympic champion who bestrides rivals US, China
-
Trump, first lady attend premier of multimillion-dollar 'Melania' documentary
-
US Senate eyes funding deal vote as government shutdown looms
-
Cuddly Olympics mascot facing life or death struggle in the wild
-
UK schoolgirl game character Amelia co-opted by far-right
-
Anger as bid to ramp up Malaysia's football fortunes backfires
-
Panama court annuls Hong Kong firm's canal port concession
-
Pioneer African Olympic skier returns to Sarajevo slopes for documentary
-
Trump threatens tariffs on nations selling oil to Cuba
-
From fragile youngster to dominant star, Sabalenka chases more glory
-
Lowly Montauban 'not dead' in French Top 14 survival hunt
-
'Winter signing' Musiala returns to boost weary Bayern
-
Elena Rybakina: Kazakhstan's ice-cool Moscow-born Melbourne finalist
-
Power battle as Sabalenka clashes with Rybakina for Melbourne title
-
Contrasting fortunes add Basque derby edge for Matarazzo's revived Sociedad
-
Asian stocks hit by fresh tech fears as gold retreats from peak
-
Kim vows to 'transform' North Korea with building drive
-
Peers and Gadecki retain Australian Open mixed-doubles crown
-
Britain's Starmer seeks to bolster China ties despite Trump warning
-
Kaori Sakamoto - Japan skating's big sister eyes Olympic gold at last
-
Heavy metal: soaring gold price a crushing weight in Vietnam
-
Kendrick Lamar, Bad Bunny, Lady Gaga face off at Grammys
-
Trump says 'hopefully' no need for military action against Iran
-
What's behind Trump's risky cheap dollar dalliance?
-
Minnesota Somalis organize house call care amid ICE raid fears
-
Sumo diplomacy: Japan's heavyweight 'soft power' ambassadors
-
The foreign POWs stuck in Ukrainian prison limbo
-
'Batman' confronts city over ICE Super Bowl plan
-
Trump says Putin agrees to pause Kyiv strikes amid harsh cold
-
US sprint star Richardson arrested on speeding charge in Florida
-
AI helps doctors spot breast cancer in scans: world-first trial
-
Arsenal seek fun factor as Frank searches for home comforts
-
Argentina declares emergency over Patagonia wildfires
-
Rose leads at Torrey Pines as Koepka makes PGA Tour return
-
US eases Venezuela sanctions after oil sector reforms
-
Trump turns to Venezuela playbook on Iran, but differences sharp
-
New York breaks out snow 'hot tubs' to melt winter storm snowfall
-
Anthony Joshua speaks on camera for first time since Nigeria crash
-
Apple earnings soar as China iPhone sales surge
What makes a great music documentary?
Colm Forde, co-founder of Britain's Doc'n Roll film festival, knows what makes a good music documentary.
"75 minutes!" he said with a laugh.
Given the thousands of hours of music-related content flooding streaming services, he is only half-joking.
Barely a single famous popstar has not received the high-profile doc treatment in the last few years.
From David Bowie to Taylor Swift, Nina Simone to Beyonce, Kurt Cobain to Olivia Rodrigo -- they have become reliable weaponry in the contest for eyeballs among streamers.
For Forde, whose festival champions "outliers and weirdos" in the world of music documentaries, many of these big label-sponsored films are just "recycling crap to boost their own back catalogues".
He focuses on innovative films that explore little-known political moments, such as "Rudeboy: The Story of Trojan Records" about Jamaican immigrant culture in 1960s Britain, or "The Rumba Kings" on the unexpected way that Cuban music influenced Congo's fight for independence.
But he's happy to admit even the big boys have moved beyond the simple talking heads and bland self-promotion of old.
He would like them to keep it short, though, rolling his eyes at mention of the 4.5-hour "Jeen-yuhs: A Kanye Trilogy" or the nearly eight-hour Beatles doc "Get Back".
"Make a great 75-minute film, and leave all the extras for an expensive Blu Ray edition for the super-fans," he insisted.
- 'Fluffed-up promo' -
One mainstream release Forde praises is "Meet Me in the Bathroom", the new archive-heavy nostalgia trip through New York's early-noughts featuring bands such as The Strokes and Yeah Yeah Yeahs.
"It's not enough to just follow a musician or do a visual version of a Wikipedia entry anymore," agreed Sam Bridger, of Pulse Films, which produced "Meet Me in the Bathroom".
"Nobody wants a fluffed-up promo piece. Audiences are savvy to that," he told AFP.
That demand has led to a trend for unvarnished accounts about fame's mental health toll.
New films about Sinead O'Connor ("Nothing Compares") and Selena Gomez ("My Mind and Me") follow recent hits about Nina Simone ("What Happened, Miss Simone?") and Amy Winehouse ("Amy").
"The best music documentaries aren't necessarily about the music. What's interesting is the human context that catalyses it," said Bridger.
Pulse hopes its upcoming film about Wu Tang Clan's Ol' Dirty Bastard will be the "'Amy' of hip-hop".
"ODB created this persona that was so powerful that it ultimately destroyed him," said Bridger.
"Just as Amy became a tabloid version of herself that was the knife from within."
- 'Very frank conversations' -
The challenge is creating something raw and honest without upsetting the artist or estate who control the music.
Recent Bowie doc "Moonage Daydream" had unprecedented archive access, but some critics felt it was wrong to skip over controversial episodes, such as his "cocaine-fuelled comments in support of fascism (and) repudiation of his bisexual persona as he tried to break America," in the words of The New Statesman.
Director Brett Morgan rejects the criticism: "It's not a biography," he told AFP at its premiere in Cannes in May.
"The film is meant to be sublime, and kaleidoscopic, and kind of wash over you."
Pulse says the key is having "very frank conversations" in the early stages of production and building trust.
"We make films collaboratively with artists. That doesn't mean giving them full editorial control because that isn't necessarily in their best interests," said Bridger, highlighting an upcoming film with Lewis Capaldi that goes deep into his mental health challenges.
Doc'n Roll, which has its own streaming service, has shown there is also an appetite for wilder fare, such as "Myth" about a Ukrainian opera singer on the frontlines of the war.
"We have more passion than sense, but what we're interested in is the power of music to bring people together," said Forde.
K.Brown--BTB