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Eric Matthies Movies

2011  
R  
Add Beats, Rhymes & Life: The Travels of A Tribe Called Quest to Queue Add Beats, Rhymes & Life: The Travels of A Tribe Called Quest to top of Queue  
Actor Michael Rapaport turns documentary filmmaker with this look at the turbulent career of progressive New York hip-hop outfit A Tribe Called Quest. Interviews with such fans and contemporaries as the Beastie Boys, De La Soul, Ludacris, Kanye West, and Common reveal how the group helped steer collective hip-hop consciousness in an exciting new direction by combining divergent styles and penning positive lyrics before deciding to call it quits back in 1998. Additional interviews with members Ali Shaheed Muhammad, Q-Tip, and Phife Dawg during their 2008 reunion tour offer added insight into their glory days as hip-hop pioneers, and life after A Tribe Called Quest. ~ Jason Buchanan, Rovi

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2009  
PG  
Discover how Hollis Mason became the masked avenger known as Nite Owl while learning how the original Minutemen were formed in this live action, documentary-style special starring Carla Gugino, Matt Frewer, Stephen McHattie, and Jeffrey Dean Morgan. A faux, tell-all autobiography written by Hans Rodionoff and directed by Eric Matthies, Under the Hood was produced by Wesley Coller in tandem with Zack Snyder's 2009 film Watchmen. ~ Jason Buchanan, Rovi

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2008  
 
Born in Chicago in 1936, Andre Williams spent much of his youth in rural Alabama, and after serving a hitch in the military he ended up in Detroit, where after winning a talent show he was offered on contract with a local record label, Fortune Records. Williams' first single, 1956's "Bacon Fat", was a lascivious dance number that became a top-ten R&B hit, but while he cut a number of equally wild follow-up tunes, none of them enjoyed the same success. However, Williams stayed in the music business, working as a songwriter (he wrote the R&B classic "Shake A Tail Feather") and producer (his clients included Stevie Wonder, Mary Wells, Bobby Blue Bland and the Contours) when he wasn't cutting his own material. Working with Ike Turner in the Seventies proved to be Williams's downfall -- through Turner he developed an addiction to cocaine, and in the Eighties he was a homeless crackhead for several years. In the Nineties, Williams cleaned up and made a comeback, recording a series of wild, raunchy albums with a variety of punk and indie rock musicians backing him up (including members of the Jon Spencer Blues Explosion, the Dirtbombs and the Demolition Doll Rods). However, while Williams had a new and loyal following, money and sobriety were still problems for him, and when filmmakers Eric Matthies and Trisha Todd decided to make a documentary about him, they ended up recording one of the most tumultuous periods of his life. In Agile, Mobile, Hostile: A Year With Andre Williams, the seventy-year-old musician makes new albums and tours the United States and Europe, but is also evicted from his apartment for non-payment of rent, falls back into drug use, suffers several health scares and ends up in the hospital with a serious case of pneumonia that leads him to the brink of death. Agile, Mobile, Hostile received its world premiere at the 2008 South by Southwest Film Festival. ~ Mark Deming, Rovi

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2007  
 
Filmmakers Eric Matthies and Trisha Todd ponder the ill effects that the lack of reliable transportation has on rural Ghanians, and show that sometimes the solution to such a problem isn't nearly as complicated as one might expect. In a country where some folks are spending up to 50 percent of their income on auto-related expenses and communities are crippled by their lack of transportation, rural existence has become increasingly difficult as the young abandon their villages in favor of seeking work, education, and health care in capital city Accra. In Boston, volunteers work to fill a container with 450 bikes and numerous parts. When the container arrives on South Africa the majority of bikes will be sold to cover shipping costs, while others are set aside for use in isolated communities suffering from transportation woes. Nurse Letitia has borrowed a bike from a friend and is determined to learn how to ride it so that she may administer vaccinations in neighboring communities, and Seth has received a bicycle that has allowed him to save time commuting to his job at a poultry farm and become involved with a local Youth Drama Group. A year later, the filmmakers return to find out just how well the bikes have been maintained and explore how great an impact the Village Bicycle Project program has really had on rural communities. ~ Jason Buchanan, Rovi

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2001  
 
Add The Matrix Revisited to Queue Add The Matrix Revisited to top of Queue  
Josh Oreck directed this look at the making of The Matrix. In addition to an explanation of the technical achievements, the documentary contains behind-the-scenes footage of stars Keanu Reeves, Carrie-Anne Moss, and Laurence Fishburne. One of the most informative sections of the film details the work that went into creating the thrilling fight sequences that appear in the film. ~ Perry Seibert, Rovi

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