Goodnight Cleveland
Goodnight Cleveland | |
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Directed by | Jim Heneghan |
Produced by | Urban Eriksson |
Starring | The Hellacopters |
Music by | The Hellacopters |
Cinematography | Jim Heneghan |
Edited by | Jim Heneghan |
Distributed by | MVD |
Release dates |
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Running time | 48 minutes |
Country | United States and Sweden |
Language | English and Swedish |
Goodnight Cleveland is a documentary film directed by Jim Heneghan for 8th Grade Films chronicling The Hellacopters North American tour in 2002 in support of their album High Visibility.
The film was shot with one camera and a sound person using the techniques of Direct Cinema and Cinéma vérité. Goodnight Cleveland is noted for its lack of dramatic arc which captures the boredom and tedium of touring life in a very realistic way.[1]
The title Goodnight Cleveland is heard in the film when Hellacopters lead singer Nicke Andersson yells "goodnight Cleveland" to the audience at the end of the Agora Ballroom show, an inverted reference to the mockumentary film This Is Spınal Tap, in which bass player Derek Smalls yells, "Hello Cleveland" to an unseen audience as the band attempts to find their way to the stage, while lost in the boiler room of the theater before a concert.
Behind the scenes
The DVD was only released as DVD region 1 and the main feature runs 48 minutes and comes with four audio tracks (vintage mono mix, band commentary, stereo and Alternative Spaghetti Western Soundtrack). The DVD also includes "over an hour of never-before-seen outtakes". The DVD was sourced from an analog transfer.
References
- ↑ "DVD Review". Sleazegrinder.com. Retrieved 2006-11-14.
External links
- Goodnight Cleveland at the Internet Movie Database
- Goodnight Cleveland at AllMovie
- Official website at 8th Grade Films
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