Meet Me In The Bathroom is a chaotic, choppy ode to NYC’s indie-rock revival

James Murphy from LCD Soundsystem has the most realized story in the overstuffed archival documentary

By: Rochelle Raveendran

James Murphy, lead singer and creative mind behind LCD Soundsystem, was one of the several indie-rock acts that defined New York City’s scene at the turn of the millennium (Emanuele Rosso/Flickr)

I cannot accept that in my lifetime, the Big Apple was affordable enough for aspiring musicians to move there with just a guitar and a dream and somehow eke out a living with like-minded creatives — often while intoxicated. Such a fable is squarely 1960s Bob Dylan-esque in my mind, before the affordability crisis and the internet turned community hubs for up-and-comers into largely virtual spaces.

But a little over 20 years ago, the stars of affordable rent and talent aligned in the skyline over grimy New York City clubs, creating an indie-rock scene that is now the stuff of legends, both for the artists it produced and for its inability to be recreated today.

The documentary Meet Me In The Bathroom, which screened at HotDocs Theatre in downtown Toronto last November, charts the growth of the iconic musical area. It attempts  to evoke the adrenaline rush of witnessing a legend in the making while also finding depth in its enigmatic key figures. Directed by Will Lovelace and Dylan Southern, the film consists entirely of archival clips and is coupled with contemporary input from those onscreen relegated to voice-over narration. Through a combination of shaky camcorder footage, grainy VHS tapes and music videos rich with the high-resolution of success, we jump from band to band at a dizzying pace that sacrifices coherence and characterization in favour of evoking the era’s youthful instability. When Lovelace and Southern pull back into the performers’ words and trust their music to take the lead, the result is so striking that it makes you wonder what would have been possible if the film’s wealth of material were better refined. 

Unfortunately, the most impactful band in the scene featured is also the least interesting to watch. The documentary is fittingly named after a song by the Strokes, whose breakthrough transformed acts in the same genre from underground to in-demand. Through a series of opening meet-cutes, we see the serendipitous collision of the Strokes with fellow indie-rock band the Yeah Yeah Yeahs and anti-folk group the Moldy Peaches.

Fans will enjoy footage of the Strokes goofing around offstage, but the perfunctory narration – or lack thereof – fails to dig beyond their blustering persona. Frontman Julian Casablancas is the most discussed out of all the figures in Meet Me In The Bathroom, but he is spoken about far more often than he speaks himself. The documentary barely even touches on his backstory that could flesh out a Bond villain. Casablancas' Swiss boarding school education and modelling-agency-president father are named and dropped faster than you can say: “So that’s how he afforded New York rent!”

And if I’m oversimplifying here, the film does little to counter me. Archival footage cannot supplant uninteresting narration about an inaccessible core figure. In one particular scene, the visuals memorable fail to bring broader insights to life as an unidentified speaker exclaims the Strokes were “sex gods!” However, all the viewer sees is a photograph of five dudes with varying curl patterns, rather than a visual that justifies this emphatic sentiment.

Meet Me In The Bathroom is based on an oral history of the same name by Lizzy Goodman that attributes every quote, yet Lovelace and Southern often avoid such clarity. For an overstuffed film, this frustrating choice undercuts the opportunity to link each character’s reflections to an individual, rather than the impersonal voice of the scene. In an eagerness to show the breadth of artists involved, depth is sacrificed to the point of meaningless inclusions. Rock band Interpol is shown for the sake of including Interpol, with not much to say beyond the conventional story of a musical act succeeding after a long stretch of failure and subsequently facing internal conflicts. Fellow band TV on the Radio fares far worse, popping up with all the briefness but none of the emotional impact of a jack-in-the-box toy.

A liberal use of frenetic montages – think clips of musicians juxtaposed with blooming flowers – forms a choppy visual style that splits the difference between hallucinations and fancams. Karen O, lead singer of the Yeah Yeah Yeahs, is easily the most captivating performer onstage, throwing her entire body into startling vocals. One of the best montages intercuts her hurtling through “Tick” with footage of revellers from the first Halloween after the Sept. 11 attacks. The music, editing and era find tumultuous synchronization, nailing the immersive potential of archival documentaries. Ironically, the sequence follows a particularly odd choice: cutting away from Kimya Dawson of the Moldy Peaches performing a deeply evocative song about the attacks for generic footage of its aftermath. At least we return to Dawson in time for her haunting warning about the Manhattan air, where toxic dust clouds are no longer visible, but still linger: “They say that it’s okay, but I say don’t breathe in.”

Questionable editing again undermines emotional impact when Karen O sustains a severe injury onstage. The accident is the culmination of her self-described mental and physical deterioration which regressed as the Yeah Yeah Yeahs grew in popularity. Lovelace and Southern empathetically explore the dichotomy between Karen O’s powerhouse performances and fragile internal life.

While being a woman in a male-dominated arena gave her the freedom to ignore any predetermined rockstar code, it also heightened her isolation. Karen O provides a compelling, thought-provoking narrative supported by her bandmates' input, but the climax is squandered when the film immediately cuts away from her injury into the stories of different groups. By the time we return to the Yeah Yeah Yeahs, their momentum is gone.

A liberal use of frenetic montages – think clips of musicians juxtaposed with blooming flowers – forms a choppy visual style that splits the difference between hallucinations and fancams

To a great extent, Meet Me In The Bathroom is at its best when its narrators are willing to be vulnerable, which is why the Yeah Yeah Yeahs are interesting to watch. But the film’s true potential comes through James Murphy, founder and creative brain behind electronic-rock band LCD Soundsystem.

After an enlightening experience taking ecstasy that is perfectly depicted in a swirling psychedelic sequence, he awakens to the visceral joy of music that makes people who don’t usually dance, dance. Initially a record producer, Murphy agitatedly describes how he reassessed the three decades of his life he spent hunting down obscure records after the emergence of piracy site Napster in 1999. Now, any 20-year-old with a computer could play the same tracks.

Murphy's debut single “Losing My Edge” channels his creeping fear of becoming an outdated loser. The documentary wisely includes over a minute of the song’s music video, in which Murphy is slapped repeatedly across the face. Having never listened to the band before, I felt the transcendental, brainstem-shifting experience of visually and audibly absorbing a good song for the first time.

All the footage for LCD Soundsystem is in perfect unison with Murphy’s overarching story, from joyous drug user to uncompromising music producer and somewhat reluctant frontman. Montages are used effectively, but it's the still moments of music alone that catch the ear and the eye. Directors Lovelace and Southern previously made a documentary about LCD Soundsystem in 2012, which may explain why this narrative is particularly polished.

Murphy is also very willing to talk, providing impassioned, witty reflections that supply much of the film’s humour. His neurotic approach to his work spurs strong reactions in the artists around him, who bring complementary compelling stories and punchy quotes that help turn Murphy into a fully realized character.

In a post-screening Q&A at the Hot Docs Ted Rogers Theatre in Toronto, Goodman, who executive produced the film, described how she relinquished control of her book to the directors, saying that a “frame by frame, literal adaptation” would be neither possible nor creatively interesting. While the resulting project takes an admirably labour-intensive approach to immersion, it is ultimately too ambitious for its own good.

Meet Me In The Bathroom, now streaming on Crave, needs ruthless, unsentimental editing to reduce its scope and better follow-up questions for interviewees that penetrate beneath the rockstar facade. The pounding thrum of nostalgia and bass guitars will likely still capture indie-rock fans who witnessed the era for themselves or wish that they had. But if I’m searching for visuals that complement and enhance insightful commentary from the groundbreaking featured performers, I think I’d rather watch their music videos.

Review: The Queen of Basketball — A basketball documentary about more than basketball

The first woman drafted to the NBA tells her truly inspirational story

By: Jillian Gonzales 

The Queen of Basketball ‘s documentary thumbnail on YouTube.

There is no getting around the fact that this year’s Academy Awards nominations are filled with exceptional films and talent, especially in the Best Documentary (Short Subject) category. Within this category, The Queen of Basketball, directed by Halifax-born Ben Proudfoot, has been rightfully nominated. 

The short film focuses on the late great Lusia ‘Lucy’ Harris and how she became the first woman drafted to the NBA. Using interview clips of Lucy in the present and basketball highlights from her career, the short documentary brings us along on Lucy’s basketball journey and is passionately told by Lucy herself. Even though she did not play in the NBA, making history and doing what she loved to do was how she found her joy.

The creation of The Queen of Basketball is all thanks to Ben Proudfoot’s exquisite taste and vision. He was able to tell such a touching and inspiring story with the use of interview clips, archive footage and a beautiful score. 

The Academy had previously recognized Ben Proudfoot’s work when he was nominated for the same category in 2021 for his short film documentary, Concerto is a Conversation. He was also named on Forbes’ 30 under 30 list in 2020 for founding Breakwater Studios. Being so young and thriving is outstanding, but devoting your craft to telling real and emotional stories is even more remarkable. 

When watching The Queen of Basketball, it is essential to keep in mind the mastermind behind the Oscar-nominated film and his goal of using film as a storytelling medium. 

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The Queen of Basketball is much more than just a film about basketball; it is about resilience and the story of a Black woman prevailing through obstacles to become a celebrated name and figure for Black women in basketball. 

The film has gotten attention and praise from notable figures of all kinds in the basketball community, including executive producers Shaquille O’Neal and Stephen Curry, who have expressed their fondness for Lucy’s story. 

The documentary is captivating as it acts as a time machine. The archive footage of Lucy’s basketball highlights and the narration of her experiences transport us back to her time and put her emotions into perspective. These segments provide historical context about the time she lived in, when Black people were heavily segregated. Being recognized was much more challenging. 

In addition, the film's score is so significant in the telling of Lucy’s story and establishing the mood and atmosphere for audiences. 

The lively music to introduce Lucy sets the tone for her inspiring journey. The soft, melancholy music when she talks about her upbringing conveys how tough her childhood was, as she grew up poor. The score later softens as Lucy talks about the sense of community that basketball brought the children around her. The moments of celebration demonstrated through archive footage are accompanied by lively crescendo music while Lucy speaks proudly and passionately to her cheerful moments, so much so that intense positive energy oozes through the screen. 

Film sound is a very technical practice. With such an emotional story like Lucy’s, utilizing fitting sounds and music truly adds emotional depth, making it a much more personal experience.

Lucy as a senior at Delta State University in the 1976-77 season. (Wikimedia Commons)

The short documentary makes it evident that Lucy has many accomplishments in her career. No matter your knowledge of basketball, they are very impressive. She won high school and college championships, took home the silver medal at the 1976 Summer Olympics, became the first woman drafted by the NBA and was inducted into the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame

After the Olympics, Lucy touches on her desire to pursue a basketball career past the intercollegiate level, but there was no place to go from there as a woman in the sport. However, when Lucy was drafted into the NBA, we find out that she chose not to play and instead, fulfilled her love of basketball by coaching her former high school’s basketball team while raising her family. 

A big reason why she chose to go in this direction was because of her mental health. Lucy speaks briefly on being diagnosed with bipolar disorder and how her feelings of helplessness took a toll on her. 

It took her some time to come to terms with the place she was at in her life. Ultimately, it was the recognition and personal belief that she could be mentioned alongside professionals that allowed her to reject the offer to play in the NBA. Even so, this was not an easy choice, but having that peace of mind let her excel in other aspects, as she moved on to inspire others. 

At the beginning of the film, she speaks about her fascination with watching her favourite players like Bill Russell, Wilt Chamberlain, Kareem Abdul Jabbar and Oscar Robertson, the latter being “[her] absolute favourite.”  A lovely moment included in the documentary is when she is escorted by Oscar Robertson during her induction to the Hall of Fame — living out her childhood dreams.

Lucy’s passion for life and competing goes beyond the game of basketball. Her love of her family shines in the documentary. She speaks lovingly about her children and their accomplishments, showing her present and personal nature.

 However, it would have been lovely to hear what her family has to say about Lucy after the cooldown of her career and how it impacts them. In addition, including some of the high schoolers she coached might have brought insight into her love for basketball from a different perspective and emphasized her ability to inspire others.

Lucy’s ability to advance in the basketball world was all due to her motivation and drive to prove she had the talent. Her being inducted into the Hall of Fame recognizes her journey as a Black woman in sports and her capability to defy the odds.

To have a successful modern-day Canadian director like Ben Proudfoot conceptualize the story of a Black woman succeeding in a male-dominated industry speaks to the growing legacy of Canadian film. 

Lusia ‘Lucy’ Harris will be remembered as an inspiring firecracker of a woman. Sadly, she passed away in January 2022 and did not see her documentary receive recognition at the Oscars, but her legacy will live on. 

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Ben Proudfoot’s The Queen of Basketball is an easy watch and even if you are not a basketball fan, it is very touching. As a sports film, many athletes can relate to the feeling of wanting to succeed at the highest level. It also speaks to the sacrifices many people have to make to better their mental health and family. 

In addition, it speaks to marginalized groups — those like Lucy who are put into boxes and have many external obstacles get in the way of their dreams. There is no glamourization in Lucy’s story, choosing instead to showcase her raw authentic self and how her journey to the top was not an easy one. The cinematography and editing bring liveliness to Lucy’s story and emphasize her genuine nature.

Lucy’s story goes beyond her accolades; it speaks to the will needed to fulfill one's dreams, follow your passions and stay motivated to achieve more. This is a theme shared so often in life and film, but seeing how it turned out for Lucy, with so many obstacles in her way, shows that nothing is impossible and that with the right kind of ambition, so much can be accomplished.

The Queen of Basketball is available to watch on YouTube.

RATING: 3.5/5

Review: Boreal to Barrenlands - Crossing Labrador

A documentary capturing the beauty of Canadian landscapes

Photo: Alex Traynor/Northern Scavenger via Canadian Geographic

Photo: Alex Traynor/Northern Scavenger via Canadian Geographic

By Minh Truong

In the summer of 2019, four paddlers traversed through the Canadian last natural frontiers of Labrador. Their story did not go untold, however, as Boreal and Barrenlands - Crossing Labrador captures their expedition filled with joys, pains and lots of bugs. 

The documentary is directed by Alex Traynor and Noah Booth —  who were two of the four paddlers — and produced by Northern Scavengers. 

With the help of two DSLR cameras, a drone and a couple of action cameras, Boreal to Barrenlands stars Booth and Traynor themselves, along with David Greene and Chris Grand in a “vlogumentary” style. While it helps bring the emotional human side to the untamed nature of the voyage, the artistic style feels at times, a happy accident.

The story follows the paddlers day by day from Jul. 15 to Aug. 18, 2019 as they start their trip in Labrador City to Nain, Labrador’s northernmost permanent settlement. Traynor’s narration unveils to the audience with expositions and explanations of what’s happening on screen, albeit sometimes it does clash with the vlogging narration as they recap their first few nights. Traynor and Booth planned to release a “daily vlog” series on YouTube going through their voyage in more detail. 

When the vlogumentary works, however, it can pull an emotional weight to the story. When starting off, the DSLR footage shows how tiny the paddlers are in the overwhelming and vast nature of Labrador. Meanwhile, the action camera point-of-view shots throw the audience straight into the action. One scene shows Traynor’s canoe snapping in half while paddling through the shallow river filled with rocks. As they tried to move the canoe off the rock, their food barrels and equipment bags started to float away as Traynor’s POV looked helpless. It is devastating to witness their struggle in the barrenlands. 

Noah Booth was ahead of them and saw the gears floating down. “The first [item] I saw was my new fly rod,” said Noah during a Question and Answer session at the documentary’s premiere. “So we started to collect and successfully recovered all of our food and gears.”

The most memorable aspect of the voyage is also one of the most disgusting parts of Labrador’s wilderness: bugs. From the very first night as they set up the camps, there was a rotation of mosquitoes and black flies.

“We wake up in the morning and between 5 a.m. and 10 a.m. there would be mosquitoes, then [the mosquitoes] would rotate to black flies for the rest of the days,” said Booth.

“The bugs were constant during the trip,” said Traynor. “One night I tried to warm myself up by the flame and it engulfed my entire bug net.”

Besides the bugs, the torrential rain and brutal low temperature didn’t help either.

“It was kind of a summer trip, although it was 11 degree (fahrenheit) most of the time,” said Traynor. He also jammed his feet and numbed his toes from the cold while paddling.

Eventually, sickness got to the team and the morale became low. Booth had dysentery for a week, while Greene broke a tooth, risking an infection. The plan went from reaching Nain to just trying to make it to Mistastin Lake. 

This is where Traynor’s snarky humour towards the situation and Booth’s excited reactions bring the human side to this adventure. One magical scene, when they reach Mistastin lake involving a care package filled with beer cans, is funny and relatable as the paddlers chugged the “rewarding” drinks after a tough travel.

Using a drone for filming was Traynor’s last-minute decision, and it paid off. Every piece of footage of extreme paddling and bug fighting comes with over the head shots of beautiful sceneries. The Mistastin River watershed with the Mistastin Lake is one of Canada’s last remaining wilderness frontiers. The drone shots feel like a reward after going through the hardship. A moment ago was an angry river, then a moment after was a calm sunny paddle on the lake of Mistatin. 

Traynor said the most rewarding aspect of the trip was that he decided to film it. The pelican case carrying the gears “was close to 20lbs”, according to Traynor. Booth also added that the canoes were 80lbs each as they dragged them, along with their equipment across forests, slogs and rivers. “I was like ‘Why the hell are we doing this trip?’ There is so much rain, so many bugs, we’ve been through forests after forests,” said Traynor. “It seems like so much work and little payoff, but Mistatin was a payoff with the ocean view and the waterfalls.”

Beside the insects, the wildlife is also another special star in the documentary, as Traynor hopes to bring forth an environmental message through their expedition. The vlogumentary style shines again as the paddlers encounter caribous, black bears, seals and even whales. Every encounter is whimsical on camera, but pretty intense in real life.

“The water near the ocean was so cold that I couldn’t put my hand in there for more than 10 seconds,” said Booth. “The seals were swimming really close to us and they kept diving around the canoes.”

It took six months to plan out the expedition. “There was no information online, only a handful of [notes from] wilderness travellers who went through Labrador,” said Booth. “Planning this trip was almost as hard as going on the trip.”

He had been going to Labrador since 2014 and been blown away by its nature. “There were a lot of rivers and lakes, and the fishing was incredible”, said Booth. “Then I pitched the idea to Alex [Traynor] and he just laughed it off, but it turned out we got planning and got going.”

Asking about what they would take on their trip next time, Traynor replied “five cents gummies,” to everyone’s laughter.

Traynor and Booth premiered their documentary on February 21, 2019 in a brewery in Etobicoke. Adding to the immersion, the seats were actually foldable camping chairs. 

It was a small and cozy screening filled with laughter as well as gasps. The audience’s reaction describes my thoughts on the documentary. The combination of the simple “vlogging” method and the impressive sceneries of Labrador’s natural frontiers helps viewers connect with the four paddlers, rooting for them on their journey.

In memoriam of Dwayne Winsor, John Weaver II, John Weaver III, Matthew Weaver, Gilles Morin, James Slamon, and a fishing guide from N.L. who lost their lives in a plane crash in Mistastin Lake on Jul. 15, 2019, during the production of Boreal to Barrenlands.

Video: Northern Scavenger on YouTube