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Bruce Springsteen Rocumentary

Crowd-sourced rockumentary focuses on Bruce Springsteen and his fans

Joe Leydon
Jul 22, 2013 | 6:00 am

Call it a crowd-sourced rockumentary, and you won’t be far off the mark.

Springsteen & I — which screens Monday and July 30 in Houston and some 500 other cities – is an exuberantly celebratory and energetically hard-rocking documentary assembled from 2,000 video submissions by Bruce Springsteen’s most fervent fans. (Ticket and venue info is available here.)

The movie covers four decades of Spingsteenmania, featuring dazzling clips of the New Jersey rocker in concerts throughout the world – and revealing anecdotes by fans.

A production of Ridley Scott’s Scott Free outfit, the movie covers four decades of Spingsteenmania, featuring dazzling clips of the New Jersey rocker in concerts throughout the world – and revealing anecdotes by fans who talk about how Springsteen’s music, and Springsteen himself, has deeply and personally affected them.

According to director Baillie Walsh, whose job it was to shape hundreds of hours of amateur and professional footage into a feature-length movie, Bruce Springsteen and his people took a hands-off approach to the project — giving their blessing, and allowing Springsteen’s music to be used, but neither requesting nor receiving any editorial control.

It should be noted, however, that Springsteen clearly was pleased with what he saw during a preview screening: He’s provided previously unreleased material – including footage from his 2012 Hyde Park Concert featuring Springsteen’s once-in-a-lifetime performance with Paul McCartney – to be shown as a kinda-sorta coda for the documentary.

All of which may explain why Walsh sounded so over-the-moon effervescent when he phoned last week to talk about Springsteen & I.

CultureMap: What was your initial response when Scott Free initially approached you to direct Springsteen & I? Were you eager and excited, or…?

Baillie Walsh: Oh, I was completely daunted. Which is of course why I took the project on. I love to be frightened of a project. And I love to have no idea on earth how I’m going to do it. So that was a kind of tempting bait for me to make this movie.

CM: Did you start out with an overall design in your head for how the movie should be shaped and structured?

BW: Not at all. I didn’t have any agenda when I started the movie – because I really had no idea what the movie was going to be. So I let the movie make itself, in a way, in the sense that what the fans sent to me would dictate what the movie was going to be. From the 2,000 contributions we got, I managed – and enjoyed – making the movie what it is.

Obviously, the music was going to play a big part in that, and I did realize that from the very beginning. But that was my thread, in a sense. I knew that as long as I had access to archive material, and access to Bruce’s music, I knew I could build something on that.

From the 2,000 contributions we got, I managed – and enjoyed – making the movie what it is.

CM: Can you recall the first time you looked at footage someone sent you, and you thought: “Oh my God! I can’t believe I got this!”?

BW: I remember feeling that way a few times, as a matter of fact. There are those days when you’re looking at footage contributors sent in, and you know they’re interesting stories, but you know it’s not quite right somehow, and it’s not grabbing you. And then, in amongst that, suddenly, you’ll get a gem. I don’t want to pick out any one of them, because I think all of those stories we have in the film are very special. And I don’t want to highlight one particular story, because that might denigrate the others in a way, or lessen the others. But I will say that when I was looking at and editing those hundreds of hours – certainly, when you get a gem, it’s fantastic. And you think, “We’ve got something! We’re on to something!” And it’s very exciting.

CM: I can’t help thinking you had a “Eureka!” moment when you saw the footage of Elvis Presley impersonator Nick Ferraro being plucked out of the crowd and invited to perform on stage with Springsteen.

BW: What I love about that is, not only do we get him on stage – which is a great moment – but what for me is more special than that is the way Nick and his wife Dottie tell their story. And they tell the story with such passion and enthusiasm that it’s impossible not to be emotional about it. I mean, you’re there with them. It’s an amazing story – and it’s amazing the way they tell the story.

My hope for it, actually, is that one day – and maybe it’s not a realistic hope – it becomes like The Rocky Horror Picture Show, where everyone who came would dress up like a character in the film.

CM: Did you have any preconceptions about Bruce Springsteen before making this movie that you wound up rethinking or discarding?

BW: Not really. Because I didn’t come to this as a fan – I came to this as a filmmaker. And I think it was very good that I came to this without being a fan. I have to say, I am a massive admirer of Bruce now. But I had to have a very quick learning curve about Bruce’s career, and about Bruce. I learned an awful lot about the man. And I think that as a human being, he’s extraordinary. He’s a great inspiration to people. And I think as a rock artist, he’s an especially great inspiration to people. Because he brings out the best in people in a very positive way through his generosity, and his humanitarianism. He’s a great influence on people.

CM: What part of the movie do you think best illustrates that?

BW: Well, you see that scene in Copenhagen near the end of the film, where Bruce runs into that busker. And he basically asks Bruce to come and play with him. And he does. There he is, walking the streets of Copenhagen, and he’s without security, he’s at the height of his fame, just walking around with the band – and he just starts busking with this guy. Well, the generosity of that is extraordinary. And the naturalness of it. The spontaneity of it. And I think that’s a great illustration of the character of Bruce Springsteen.

CM: What’s the best reason for seeing Springsteen & I on the big screen, rather than waiting for Blu-Ray or DVD?

BW: Because while you watch it, it becomes like a concert. And it’s a communal experience. And because Bruce is all about his fans and going to his gigs, hopefully it’s going to have the same effect.

CM: Do you think it’ll eventually have “sing-along” screenings?

BW: I really hope so. My hope for it, actually, is that one day – and maybe it’s not a realistic hope – it becomes like The Rocky Horror Picture Show, where everyone who came would dress up like a character in the film.

Springsteen & I will be shown at 7:30 p.m. Monday at seven Houston area theaters, and July 30 at the Edwards Marq*E Stadium 22. Ticket and venue info is available here.

Fans love Bruce.

Bruce Springsteen in Springsteen and I
Courtesy photo
Fans love Bruce.
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Movie Review

Twin sisters set out for revenge in Tarantino-esque film 'Is God Is'

Alex Bentley
May 15, 2026 | 10:00 am
Kara Young and Mallori Johnson in Is God Is
Photo by Patti Perret
Kara Young and Mallori Johnson in Is God Is.

The revenge story is one of the most enduring in all of cinema as it can be adapted to multiple different genres. It most naturally fits in the action/thriller genre, but comedies, dramas, Westerns, and more have made good use of characters seeking revenge. The new film Is God Is demonstrates that malleability by detailing an intensely personal story that turns into something bigger.

Twins Racine (Kara Young) and Anaia (Mallori Johnson) have lived a difficult life, going in and out of foster care and forced to endure stares and taunts because each bears burn scars from a childhood attack. Racine, whose scars are “only” on her left arm, has developed into the protector of Anaia, who suffered burns over much of her face.

An unexpected call from their mother, Ruby (Vivica A. Fox), who was burned almost beyond recognition in the attack, gives them a purpose: Seeking revenge on the man who ruined their lives. Setting out in a barely working car and with only a small amount of direction, the sisters attempt to fulfill the mission without losing their souls.

Written and directed by first-time feature filmmaker Aleasha Harris, the film may remind some viewers of Quentin Tarantino’s Kill Bill, and not just because Fox has small roles in both films. Harris has a knack for dialogue, especially between the twins, that ably gets across the story exposition and entertains at the same time. There are many instances where she has the sisters hold silent conversations told on screen via subtitles to convey twin-speak, a method that deepens their connection and draws the viewer in.

Harris also has her characters engage in the type of shocking violence that Tarantino has used to great effect. The difference here, though, is that even though the story is heightened to a certain degree, the egregious nature of the crime perpetrated upon the girls and their mother makes the whole thing feel bracingly real. This revenge plot is not meant to merely entertain; it’s designed to put the audience in Racine and Anaia’s shoes and fully embrace the call for justice.

There are a few times when the lack of experience by Harris shows up, especially in the climactic sequence where the stunt work could have used some more precision. But overall, it’s a self-assured filmmaking debut for the playwright-turned-director, who’s adapted her own play with a richness and depth that is not often found from someone stepping behind the camera for the first time.

Young and Johnson don’t especially look alike, but they embody the essence of twin sisters, and it’s their chemistry together that makes the story as impactful as it is. They’re joined by other strong female performances by Fox, Erika Alexander, and Janelle Monáe, each of whom brings a different vibe. And anyone who loves This is Us or Paradise should prepare themselves for a completely different kind of role for Sterling K. Brown.

Is God Is uses a variety of inspirations for its storytelling, but in the end it becomes its own thing. The filmmaking world can always stand to have another strong Black voice, and Harris has made an auspicious debut, one that should have cinephiles wondering what she’ll do next.

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Is God Is opens in theaters on May 15.

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