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I Am Trying To Break Your Heart
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Directed by Sam Jones
When photographer and commercial director Sam Jones began plans to make I Am Trying to Break Your Heart, he envisioned a long-form rock video about the making of a Wilco album, Yankee Hotel Foxtrot. But right from the start, it seemed that Jones was destined to make a documentary about an extremely tumultuous period in the band's existence. The day before Jones started shooting, Jeff Tweedy, the band's singer-songwriter, called to say that they had fired Ken Coomer, and hired a new drummer, Glenn Kotche. Jones started shooting his film, in black-and-white, as the band recorded their inventive new album. He captured the tensions caused by creative differences between Tweedy and guitarist-songwriter-engineer Jay Bennett. Tweedy takes a break from making the album to go on a short solo tour. The band eventually completes the album, and after it's mixed by Jim O'Rourke, Tweedy is happy with it, and feels that the band has taken their music in a new direction. They send it to their label, Reprise, a division of Time Warner, and after two weeks of silence, the label, concerned about the album's commercial prospects, calls band manager Tony Margherita and asks for the band to make changes. Tweedy refuses, and Reprise decides to let the band take Yankee Hotel Foxtrot elsewhere. The band goes on tour, and stream the album on their website. Eventually the conflict between Tweedy and Bennett comes to a head. I Am Trying to Break Your Heart (named of a song on the album) documents the unexpected trials of the band, and their efforts to overcome them. The film premiered at the 2002 Los Angeles Film Festival. ~ Josh Ralske, All Movie Guide
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"Talk about being at the right place at the right time. This film captures the change in sound & personnel, and perhaps the turning point the the carrier of this band. At time painful to watch, but undoubtedly an amazing look inside the making of a new classic. " [More]
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Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
is neutral about it.
I Am Trying to Break Your Heart is a enjoyable documentary about the band Wilco, and the making of the album Yankee Hotel Foxtrot. The film will certainly appeal to the band's fans, but there are enough interesting people and dramatic events documented here to draw in viewers unfamiliar with Wilco's music. Front and center is Jeff Tweedy, the band's disheveled, musically adventurous lead singer, who has a somewhat antagonistic relationship with the band's talented guitarist, Jay Bennett (who looks a lot like Philip Seymour Hoffman). The two have several protracted creative arguments about the music before things reach the breaking point. Jones shows us Tweedy puking before a show, and the singer nonchalantly explains that he does it all the time and has since he was a child because of migraines. Tweedy is a low-key kind of guy, so it's exciting to see how animated he gets during the band's live performances, which Jones captures with energetic flurries of camera movement. The film shows how the record business can undermine a band that isn't easily pigeonholed musically. The baffled response their label has to their painstakingly produced work exemplifies this point. For the sake of his soul, Tweedy proclaims, he "can't entertain any of their half-assed, fearful, frightened bulls___." The film's tone is generally upbeat, considering the ordeal the band went through. There are casual fun moments between the band members, and it concludes with a satisfyingly ironic happy ending. ~ Josh Ralske, All Movie Guide
 

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