Meeting People Is Easy | |
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VHS cover |
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Directed by | Grant Gee |
Produced by | Dilly Gent |
Music by | Radiohead |
Editing by | Jerry Chater |
Studio | Kudos Pictures |
Distributed by | Parlophone (EMI) |
Release date(s) | 30 November 1998 | (UK, VHS)
Running time | 95 minutes |
Country | United Kingdom |
Language | English |
Meeting People Is Easy, first released on 30 November 1998, is a rockumentary by Grant Gee following British alternative rock band Radiohead on their exhaustive world tour following the success of their 1997 album OK Computer.[1] The film was nominated for a Grammy Award in the "Best Long Form Music Video" category in 2000.
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Meeting People Is Easy takes place during the promotion of Radiohead's 1997 release OK Computer, containing a collage of video clips, sound bites, and dialogue going behind the scenes with the band on their world tour, showing the eventual burn-out of the group as the world tour progresses. The inaugural show of the OK Computer tour began on 22 May 1997 in Barcelona, Spain. Their final performance, 104 concerts later, was in New York's Radio City Music Hall.[1]
Unlike other music documentaries, the film does not focus on the band's friendship with one another, families, or anything else outside the direct production, promotion and touring of a record. Most of the film contains footage consisting of music writing, concerts, promotional material, and abstract video footage.
During interviews, the rock group take on critics, record-label hype and American modern-rock radio, which Yorke compares to "a fridge buzzing." This coincides with the soundtrack of the film, with sounds that weave in and out of snatches of interviews, conversations, and songs. Along with this "radio wave" effect is a series of edits and quickly moving shots with stills, slow tracking shots, time-lapse photography, and colour/black-and-white film and video.
The documentary opens with video taken from the back of a subway train, along with the track "Fitter Happier" from OK Computer. This cuts to the band members reading off several dozen radio intros. Interspliced with the promotional material is live footage taken from various venues around the world, including the song "Karma Police" on Late Show with David Letterman.
Included in the documentary are various video clips of television appearances, newspaper articles, and other mentions of Radiohead in the media. In a clip from a Sky News programme, presenter Kay Burley comments on the video for the band's song "No Surprises", saying "Music to cut your wrists to. … It's the most miserable-sounding tune I've ever heard." While watching the video, the programme's music reviewer quips "You'll probably quite enjoy it because he actually drowns at the end". The making of the video is then shown, where frontman Thom Yorke is lip-synching while trapped in a tank of rising water.[2]
The world tour that is the subject of the film has subsequently been admitted as a low point for the band, specifically Yorke, who had a near-breakdown. As "On Your Own Again" by Scott Walker plays on the soundtrack, Yorke is seen placing a note that reads "i am not here and this is not really happening" on his hotel windowpane, which looks out onto midtown Manhattan. This message was suggested by his friend Michael Stipe (singer of R.E.M.) as a way of dissociating himself from everything around him. This would form the background of Radiohead's recording sessions beginning in 1999 for their next albums Kid A and Amnesiac, inspiring a different songwriting and recording style and the band's changed sound after OK Computer.
In an interview, director Grant Gee explained the production process of filming Meeting People Is Easy. Gee explains that Radiohead "sat in these hotel suites for three days, four suites booked up simultaneously" doing interviews; 20-minute slots for interviews, a 40-minute slot if it was a bigger newspaper or magazine. To film and record every individual interview, Gee had to have been "running around, leaving a microphone in one room, going and filming something in another".[3]
Although Meeting People Is Easy is not a traditional concert film as it often cuts away from songs before they are finished, it features clips of several recordings that are not found in other official releases:
Versions and live performances of songs that were already released or eventually released:
Meeting People Is Easy was released on VHS on 30 November 1998 in the United Kingdom, later on 12 June 2000 on DVD. It was released in both VHS and DVD format on 18 May 1999 in the United States.
In subsequent years EMI and other record labels had released countless DVDs to promote pop and rock acts, as the format has become dominant over VHS in most parts of the world. In 1999, the film became the first DVD ever released by Radiohead's record label EMI/Parlophone/Capitol Records.
Several television channels broadcast Meeting People Is Easy after its release. In the UK, Channel 4 broadcast the film on 6 May 1999.[4] In the U.S., MTV broadcast a premiere of the film on 16 May 1999, and The Sundance Channel broadcast the documentary 9 times during May 2000.[5]
Meeting People Is Easy had been released for screening in movie theatres, but not widely. Film screenings included the following:
Since Meeting People Is Easy Radiohead have released only one DVD, the 2004 limited release The Most Gigantic Lying Mouth of All Time, based on material taken from their website.
The home video packaging and cover art is by Stanley Donwood and Thom Yorke, similar to OK Computer-era artwork. The VHS box spine and the DVD booklet contain the following text:
The back of the package has the lyrics for the aforementioned "Big Boots" intentionally misprinted:
Reception for Meeting People Is Easy was generally positive. The film received an average rating of 6.5/10 on Rotten Tomatoes, giving it 71% freshness.[8] Reviewer Jessica Brandt of theshrubbery.com gave 4 out of 5 stars.[9] Film critic Daniel Fletcher named Meeting People is Easy one of his ten favourite films.[10]
Troy Patterson, a critic for Entertainment Weekly, gave the film a B, calling it "an expressive mood piece creepy with cosmopolitan paranoia and bracingly somber bombast".[11]
Bart Blasengame gave the film 4 out of 5 stars, stating: "Instead of taking the usual tour documentary approach and dwelling on individual concerts or behind-the-scenes banter between the band, Gee's film focuses on the absurdity of being an important rock band in the current musical landscape - the shallow marketing of the band, the endless stream of redundant interviews, the blinding photo shoots and awkward television appearances." [1]
Kevin Archibald of IGN gave the film a rating of 6/10. He noted that the film would not interest the casual Radiohead listener, saying: "If you're a disciple of Radiohead you'll probably notch this at around a 9. For myself, and casual fans like me, I expect you will tire of the film long before the credits roll."[12]
The film has sold over half a million copies on DVD/VHS.[13]
The film was nominated for a Grammy Award in the "Best Long Form Music Video" category in 2000.[13][14]
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