traptunderice wrote:
IronDuchess wrote:
I'm not really a fan of either of his documentaries, though for other reasons.
Haven't seen this one but I didn't find his first to be awful to someone new to metal. What did you find wrong with it?
What I found wrong with the first one? For someone creating a documentary for people new to metal, his entire understanding of the genre appears to be one of someone who is new to metal, himself.
I'm not sure if you're expecting me to pull the typical "he put Cradle of Filth as Norwegian Black Metal" spiel, but I'll assume everyone's heard that one by now and move on. Beyond the CoF error which could have been put down to bad editing, Dunn has a very limited understanding of what constitutes metal's core sub-genres (by this I mean black metal, thrash metal, death metal, doom metal, traditional heavy metal). For example, he has apparently no understanding of what doom metal is considering he seems to believe that bands like Opeth and Theatre of Tragedy are more representative of the genre than bands like Candlemass or Witchfinder General or...you know...Sabbath

He also apparently doesn't understand what defines thrash metal either, not to mention his unawareness of the existence of crossover. I'm sorry, but people can say "blah blah genres" all they want, but to me these are fairly obvious and idiotic misunderstandings for someone who has been into the music for more than a year or two. It's not like I'm criticising him for things most metalheads wouldn't know. If you love the genre as much as you say you do, then know the history...especially if you're going to make a documentary about it. Ok, fine make a rudimentary documentary, but it does nothing but mislead people new to the genre when they decide to trust the information.
That said, even his whole question of "why heavy metal has been consistently stereotyped, dismissed, and condemned" is rather needless and idiotic for anyone that knows, even remotely, the history of the genre, which he could have represented more accurately. It's like asking why punk "has been consistently stereotyped, dismissed, and condemned." We are talking about musical sub-cultures that, to one degree or another, arose as reactive sub-cultures. Even if bands like Venom weren't serious about their satanic image, it was still pushing boundaries and reacting to a certain social climate. But Dunn doesn't even go as far as to touch on that, but rather sticks to the simplistic "outsider" take. Pretty much every section of this film is simplistic (which is fine since documentaries often just skim the surface) and flawed in some way...and if you're creating a piece of work in order to inform outsiders on something they don't know about, at least know about the subject yourself.