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Take That This Life – Live In Concert 2024 - Movies (Feb 25th)
Den of Thieves 2 Pantera 2025 - Movies (Feb 24th)
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Gladiator II 2024 - Movies (Feb 24th)
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Veselka The Rainbow on the Corner at the Center of the World 2024 - Movies (Feb 23rd)
Monster Mash 2024 - Movies (Feb 23rd)
Kraven the Hunter 2024 - Movies (Feb 23rd)
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Assassins Guild 2024 - Movies (Feb 20th)
Highway Thru Hell - (Feb 26th)
Rocky Mountain Wreckers - (Feb 26th)
Gangland Chronicles - (Oct 1st)
Ruby Wax- Cast Away - (Oct 1st)
Deadliest Catch - (Oct 2nd)
Murder in a Small Town - (Oct 2nd)
Seoul Busters - (Oct 2nd)
Beyond the Gates - (Feb 26th)
Win or Lose - (Feb 26th)
Wildcard Kitchen - (Feb 26th)
WWE NXT - (Feb 26th)
FBI - (Feb 26th)
7 Little Johnstons - (Feb 26th)
Kitchen Nightmares - (Feb 26th)
The Rookie - (Feb 26th)
Road Rage - (Feb 26th)
Renovation Aloha - (Feb 26th)
The Real Housewives of Beverly Hills - (Feb 26th)
St. Denis Medical - (Feb 26th)
The Irrational - (Feb 26th)
This is a 2012 documentary of Ginger Baker by Jay Bulger, a journalist who wrote a Rolling Stone article of the legendary English rock drummer and later was able to interview him at length on his South African estate. Centered around Baker's recollections, the documentary proceeds through his life chronologically. We start his discovery of jazz records as a child, his early career as a musician and then the acclaimed groups of the 1960s that cemented his reputation (Cream, Blind Faith and Ginger Baker's Air Force). Much time is spent on his time in Nigeria in the early 1970s, when he played with Fela Kuti and ran a state-of-the-art recording studio in Lagos. The documentary pretty much declares the mid-1970s on as the downhill period of Ginger Baker's life. From then on, tax problems, failed marriages and being deported overshadow what little musical productivity he had left. Even before then, he is painted as a fantastic drummer but a very flawed human being. Some of the rock musicians here (Eric Clapton, Jack Bruce, Neil Peart, Stewart Copeland, Steve Winwood and many others) praise his technical skills, but there's just as much complaint that he is impossible to work with. Interviews with his ex-wives, sister and son depict a man who was always prepared to unroot himself and abandon his loved ones. The greatest example of Ginger Baker's unlikeability is the opening scene of the documentary: when Jay Bulger tells him that he now intends to go off and interview others for their side of the story, Baker strikes him in the face with his cane. This is generally a well-rounded documentary that covers all the bases. In spite of the filmmaker's wish to exaggerate the poignant nature of Baker's career arc, the drummer himself admirably refuses to go along. However, I had a few minor complaints while watching the documentary. One is that Jay Bulger is a young American man of the "bro" type, which sorely jives with the Britain-Nigeria axis that is the foundation of Baker's career. Happily, he stays out of the way for the most part. Some of the animations that were made just for the documentary are silly, and there is such an abundance of archival footage that there was arguably no need for something extra.