Film Festival on Jan. 23, prior to hitting Netflix on Feb. 16. The films chart West’s rise in music, from young producer and wannabe rapper to Grammy winner and global superstar. The trio of films also covers the 2007 death of West’s beloved mother, Donda, the rapper’s mental health struggles and his own failed presidential bid in 2020., demanding that he be given more control over the films, writing, “I must get final edit and approval on this doc before it releases on Netflix[.
Having first met West in the late ’90s, Simmons, a stand-up-comedian-turned-filmmaker, began following him in earnest with a camera in in the early 2000s. Inspired by— the 1994 doc that follows Chicago high school students hoping to become professional basketball players — he long planned on turning West’s trajectory into a documentary.
Simmons and West reconnected after the musician’s public breakdown during the 2016 Saint Pablo tour, which included a Sacramento, Calif., show where the rapper criticized everyone from Mark Zuckerberg to “I always thought he was just going off. I didn’t think it was anything to do with mental health. And in our community, we don’t pay attention to mental health, so we didn’t understand it,” explains Simmons. “To lose his mom, Donda West, in public like he did, you just don’t know what that would do to a person.”, which premiered at the Tribeca Film Festival, and the 30 for 30 doc. Says Simmons, “We can’t go around anything that happens in life. Things happen, and we were filming it.
don’t care
Blessed to see him smiling
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