what to watch
What to watch: A pair of documentaries about musicians on Austin screens
If you're into documentaries, this is the weekend for you. On Austin screens a pair of music documentaries (including one very appropriately timed with Austin Reggae Fest) will whisk viewers through the whole spectrum of emotions.
This Weekend at the Drafthouse
If the programming team at the Alamo Drafthouse is to be trusted (and they are), then their endorsement of the new documentary Last Days Here (which world premiered at SXSW in 2011) is something to be excited about. In a recent blog post, Zack Carlson called it his favorite documentary ever.
The film follows Bobby Liebling, front man for the band Pentagram which has had frequent-but-always-foiled brushes with mainstream success, who is now a sad shadow of his former self, a victim of years of drug abuse. So far gone he admits his is completely indifferent to death while searching for crack on the floor of his parent's basement, it will take super fan Sean "Pellet" Pelletie's persistence to show Liebling it's worth cleaning himself up and getting back on stage. Full of surprising twists and turns, this small but powerful documentary is sure to be an audience favorite this weekend.
Marley is another SXSW world premiere and another documentary about a musician. Oscar-winning director Kevin Macdonald (The Last King of Scotland) brings us this sprawling, 144 minute portrait of the life, politics, spirituality and teachings of Bob Marley. The staggeringly in-depth film features rare footage and new interviews with friends and family. Marley is quality documentary filmmaking and a sweeping portrait of a true legend. (Marley also opens Friday at Violet Crown Cinema.)
Beyond the Weekend
On Monday (4/23) at the Violet Crown, The Show! presents a special screening of local filmmaker Clay Liford's Wuss. Mitch (Nate Rubin) is a high-school teacher who is frequently the butt of jokes and the subject of ridicule. Determined to fight back, he teams up with one of his students, a girl feared in the halls of the school. Wuss is a darkly hilarious film and Monday's screening is the perfect opportunity to support local filmmaking.