As fans of comedian/podcaster/actor/musician Marc Maron, Jack and I were inclined to love this documentary about him. We did. It features interviews with many other comics and archival footage of him before, during, and after his relationship with his late partner Lynn Shelton, who died suddenly of a blood disorder during lockdown.
Director Steven Feinartz, who has directed two of Maron's stand-up specials, has been working on this for four years and, along with story editor Julie Seabaugh and three editors, has given us a delightful journey into the neurotic mind and life of the man. Composer Marlon Lang's soundtrack, not available online as far as I can tell, is supplemented by Maron's own guitar playing and occasional singing.
Rotten Tomatoes critics are very, very good with an average of 97%, as are its audiences at 94. We rented this on December 6.
Maron's podcast WTF ended in October with episode #1686 after sixteen years (available at the above link or wherever you get your podcasts). He started by interviewing other comics and musicians and then branched out to other celebrities, recording in a studio in his southern California garage. Arguably, his interview #613 with President Obama in 2015 considerably widened Maron's fame, and Maron traveled to the Washington DC office of our favorite president to close out the series. We like to cherry pick episodes, generally 75-90 minutes long, including Maron's rambling, entertaining prologues, to play during road trips.
Thirty producers earns this a spot on my Producers Plethora Prize but it will be hard to get to the top, as the winner has 53!
Maron was last blogged for To Leslie. Feinartz has directed a bunch of comedians' specials and a few other projects, Seabaugh worked on one other comedy documentary, and this is Lang's second feature plus a few shorts.
My regular readers may have noticed the paucity of documentaries in my blog. I know there are innumerable wonderful docs out there–many friends have recommended some–but I tend to be drawn to fiction first and foremost, and my to-watch list is long. That said, approximately 110 documentaries out of 1618 movies appear on this blog. In case you missed it, here's a link to the alphabetized index (the link is also available in the header of each web page of babetteflix).