Documentaire sur le groupe indépendant américain Pavement, qui combine des scénarios avec des images documentaires du groupe et une mise en scène musicale composée de chansons de leur discog... Tout lireDocumentaire sur le groupe indépendant américain Pavement, qui combine des scénarios avec des images documentaires du groupe et une mise en scène musicale composée de chansons de leur discographie.Documentaire sur le groupe indépendant américain Pavement, qui combine des scénarios avec des images documentaires du groupe et une mise en scène musicale composée de chansons de leur discographie.
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
- Récompenses
- 2 victoires et 4 nominations au total
Avis à la une
I truly don't know how to put into words how good this movie is. I feel sort of like the target audience for this; pavement is my favorite band, stephen malkmus is one of my all-time idols, plus, i'm a sucker for any kind of meta-on-meta ironic satirical absurd stuff. I've watched this a couple times a month since it came to prime. My family absolutely hates this film because i bring it up constantly.
The cast was downright swell. I'll be honest, i was pretty much dreading keery's role in pavements since i heard he'd be playing malkmus, but i have to give it to him - he was really funny playing a satirical rising actor. Griffin newman is also in this film for like, three scenes, as steve west. That alone is worth ten stars. I had anticipated more of jason schwartzman, which was mildly disappointing. Of course, it was so fun to see the members of pavement in this as well!
The scenes with the pavement museum exhibit made me quite emotional. In addition, i found that the delicate threading together of the fake movie, the actual pavement MTV footage, the jukebox musical, and the exhibit to be brilliant. Overall, this was a fantastic film. I believe it would definitely be a bit hard to follow for a non-die-hard pavement fan, but i think things are explained well enough in the movie. And besides, is anyone really going to watch this if they don't know the least bit about pavement?
The cast was downright swell. I'll be honest, i was pretty much dreading keery's role in pavements since i heard he'd be playing malkmus, but i have to give it to him - he was really funny playing a satirical rising actor. Griffin newman is also in this film for like, three scenes, as steve west. That alone is worth ten stars. I had anticipated more of jason schwartzman, which was mildly disappointing. Of course, it was so fun to see the members of pavement in this as well!
The scenes with the pavement museum exhibit made me quite emotional. In addition, i found that the delicate threading together of the fake movie, the actual pavement MTV footage, the jukebox musical, and the exhibit to be brilliant. Overall, this was a fantastic film. I believe it would definitely be a bit hard to follow for a non-die-hard pavement fan, but i think things are explained well enough in the movie. And besides, is anyone really going to watch this if they don't know the least bit about pavement?
10amir_e_a
I'm not very good at sarcasm, wryness, or double entendre in general, and especially not when talking about music. It would be very fitting when talking about Pavement, but no, I won't even try.
I'll just say that I've loved the band since the mid-nineties, and I know most of their discography by heart, and I saw them live, and I absolutely loved the movie.
It has everything I hoped for. A lot of Pavement music. The surprisingly beautiful and sexy scenes from the stage musical. (Why is it surprising, actually? Pavement's music is sexy in a lot of ways, let's just admit it; the musical just brings it to the front, and it does it VERY tastefully.) Memories of the 1990s' MTV, but shown not in silly, nostalgic way, but as something that could be living and current. Layers upon layers of parody, and they all WORK. There's even some actual chronological narrative (although you probably shouldn't use this movie as a reference in Wikipedia).
Would I enjoy it so much if I weren't a fan of the band? Maybe not, but that's not the right question anyway. The right question is could you do something like this about any other 1990s band? Probably not. So I'd say that if you haven't done it already, it's worth listening to them so you could enjoy this brilliant documentary.
And yes, I think that "documentary" is a correct description. I'm not sure that it will get any Oscars this year, but it will likely be recognized as a milestone in documentary making some day later-just like Pavement's music eventually got what it deserved.
I'll just say that I've loved the band since the mid-nineties, and I know most of their discography by heart, and I saw them live, and I absolutely loved the movie.
It has everything I hoped for. A lot of Pavement music. The surprisingly beautiful and sexy scenes from the stage musical. (Why is it surprising, actually? Pavement's music is sexy in a lot of ways, let's just admit it; the musical just brings it to the front, and it does it VERY tastefully.) Memories of the 1990s' MTV, but shown not in silly, nostalgic way, but as something that could be living and current. Layers upon layers of parody, and they all WORK. There's even some actual chronological narrative (although you probably shouldn't use this movie as a reference in Wikipedia).
Would I enjoy it so much if I weren't a fan of the band? Maybe not, but that's not the right question anyway. The right question is could you do something like this about any other 1990s band? Probably not. So I'd say that if you haven't done it already, it's worth listening to them so you could enjoy this brilliant documentary.
And yes, I think that "documentary" is a correct description. I'm not sure that it will get any Oscars this year, but it will likely be recognized as a milestone in documentary making some day later-just like Pavement's music eventually got what it deserved.
Saw at the Chicago Film Fest October 2024. Had heard the film was "meta" and did not know what to expect...absolutely loved it. Imaginative, fun, insightful for big fans like myself and super well made! Not your standard procedural rock doc, in a good way. The film took a chance by layering a musical, a "fake" melodramatic biopic (starring Joe Keery in a hilarious and well played role), concert footage and real interview footage. Steve Malkmus and one of the producers gave a great Q and A after and it was fun to see Steve (seemingly) satisfied with the film! I hope this gets a broader theatrical release or at least a proper online release because it is an inventive, delightfully fresh music film and deserves to be seen!
'Pavements' is so indie, so DIY, so alternative, so non-mainstream, so unsigned, so self-produced, so underground, so small-scale, so grassroots, so self-released, so non-commercial, so artisianal, so boutique, so groundbreaking, so seminal, so cutting-edge, so innovative, so pioneering, so avant-garde, so trailblazing, so revolutionary, so trendsetting, so modern, so forward-thinking, so breakthrough, so radical...
...have I mentioned indie?...
...so off-the-cuff, so improvised, so unforced, so free-spirited, so autonomous, so catalytic, so foundational, so pathbreaking, so unconventional, so fresh...
...so indie you can only watch it on vinyl.
...have I mentioned indie?...
...so off-the-cuff, so improvised, so unforced, so free-spirited, so autonomous, so catalytic, so foundational, so pathbreaking, so unconventional, so fresh...
...so indie you can only watch it on vinyl.
10MLVC4E
There are movies you enjoy and then there are movies that completely overwhelm you. Pavements did just that to me. I've been crying from the first second to the last, carried away by emotion, memory, and music. This is not just a documentary; it's a strange and beautiful hallucination about my all-time favorite band, Pavement, and about Stephen Joseph Malkmus, who's long been something between a musical idol and an emotional reference point for me.
The film is not made to convince new fans. It doesn't explain much, nor does it follow a clear linear narrative. It's messy, meta, ironic, sometimes even absurd-but deeply heartfelt. Some will adore it, others will detest it or simply not understand a thing. But for those of us who have carried Pavement in our veins since the '90s, it feels like a gift. A rare, chaotic, and unpredictable gift, just like the band itself.
I found it bold, innovative, and refreshingly different from typical rock docs. There's a museum (both real and surreal), there's a jukebox musical, and there's even a fake biopic that hilariously hits every cliché of the genre while still conveying the real drama behind the band's history. And in between, the music-always the music-guiding every emotional beat, every twist of nostalgia. When Circa 1762 started playing, I broke down. It's one of my favorite, most overlooked songs from their catalog, and hearing it in this context felt like a private message.
If I miss something, it's that Carrot Rope doesn't close the film. That song, that farewell disguised as a joke, would have been the perfect ending. But maybe that's also part of the spirit of Pavement: never giving the expected, always choosing the offbeat road.
Would I love for them to reunite for real, to tour again, to make a movie, to turn the museum into something permanent? Of course. But for now, this film is enough to make me cry like the first time I heard Gold Soundz. A kaleidoscopic, loving tribute to a band that changed my life-and continues to do so.
The film is not made to convince new fans. It doesn't explain much, nor does it follow a clear linear narrative. It's messy, meta, ironic, sometimes even absurd-but deeply heartfelt. Some will adore it, others will detest it or simply not understand a thing. But for those of us who have carried Pavement in our veins since the '90s, it feels like a gift. A rare, chaotic, and unpredictable gift, just like the band itself.
I found it bold, innovative, and refreshingly different from typical rock docs. There's a museum (both real and surreal), there's a jukebox musical, and there's even a fake biopic that hilariously hits every cliché of the genre while still conveying the real drama behind the band's history. And in between, the music-always the music-guiding every emotional beat, every twist of nostalgia. When Circa 1762 started playing, I broke down. It's one of my favorite, most overlooked songs from their catalog, and hearing it in this context felt like a private message.
If I miss something, it's that Carrot Rope doesn't close the film. That song, that farewell disguised as a joke, would have been the perfect ending. But maybe that's also part of the spirit of Pavement: never giving the expected, always choosing the offbeat road.
Would I love for them to reunite for real, to tour again, to make a movie, to turn the museum into something permanent? Of course. But for now, this film is enough to make me cry like the first time I heard Gold Soundz. A kaleidoscopic, loving tribute to a band that changed my life-and continues to do so.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesPavement is the most influential band in the world.
- ConnexionsFeatured in WatchMojo: Top 10 Best Movies of 2025 So Far (2025)
- Bandes originalesBrinx Job
Written by Stephen Malkmus
Performed by Pavement
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Détails
Box-office
- Montant brut aux États-Unis et au Canada
- 350 173 $US
- Week-end de sortie aux États-Unis et au Canada
- 13 074 $US
- 4 mai 2025
- Montant brut mondial
- 350 173 $US
- Durée
- 2h 8min(128 min)
- Couleur
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