Meet Me in the Bathroom (2022)

★ 5.4 1h 48m 19 votes IMDb
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Set against the backdrop of 9/11, this documentary tells the story of how a new generation kickstarted a musical rebirth for New York City that reverberated around the world.

Meet Me in the Bathroom

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Cast

Adam Green
Adam Green as Self - The Moldy Peaches Age 45 · Mount Kisco, New York, USA Adam Green is an American singer-songwriter, artist, and filmmaker. Green is well known for his involvement in the anti-folk music movement and as one half of the band The Moldy Peaches, alongside fel...
Kimya Dawson
Kimya Dawson as Self - The Moldy Peaches Age 53 · Bedford Hills, New York, USA Kimya Dawson (they/she) is an American singer-songwriter and member of the band the Moldy Peaches..
Karen O
Karen O as Self - Yeah Yeah Yeahs Age 47 · Busan, South Korea Karen Lee Orzolek (born November 22, 1978), known professionally as Karen O, is a South Korean-born American singer, songwriter, musician, and record producer. She is the lead vocalist for American ro...
Julian Casablancas
Julian Casablancas as Self - The Strokes (voice) (archive sound) Age 47 · New York City, New York, USA Julian Fernando Casablancas is an American singer, musician, songwriter, and record producer. He is best known as the lead singer and primary songwriter of American rock band The Strokes..
Albert Hammond Jr.
Albert Hammond Jr. as Self - The Strokes (voice) (archive sound) Age 46 · Los Angeles, California, USA Albert Louis Hammond Jr. (born Hammond III; April 9, 1980) is an American musician who is a member of the rock band The Strokes as rhythm and lead guitarist, as well as occasionally a keyboard player...
Paul Banks
Paul Banks as Self - Interpol Age 48 · Clacton-on-Sea, Essex, England, UK Paul Julian Banks (born 3 May 1978) is an English-born American musician, singer, songwriter, and DJ. Noted for his baritone singing voice, he is best known as the lead vocalist, rhythm guitarist, and...

Audience Reviews

Patrick Martin Jr. 8/10 Dec 16, 2022
Another good doc about a place in time (Y2K/9-11) and the people who created art our to pain and desire. Lots of good archival footage and some driving interviews that make you want to go out and start a band too.

Best line I’ve ever heard about how to relate tp parents disappointment about wanting to be a musician: “my parents were immigrants and you tell them you want to be in a band, I may as well have told them thanks for all that but I wanna go put on some clown shoes”. Simply awesome.
CinemaSerf 6/10 Jan 13, 2024
Not that it's exactly comparable, but I grew up very much amidst a folk music scene with loads of extremely mediocre working-class musicians - ballad singers, guitarists, fiddlers etc., who all thought they would go on to some sort of musical greatness. Watching this, it's good to know that those ridiculous pipe dreams were not just confined to Glasgow in the 1970s. Spool on to the early naughties and we are presented with a collection of "musicians" living in Yew York City with aspirations that in the vast majority of cases way outstripped their talents. The one exceptions is probably Julian Casablancas, who managed with "The Strokes" to get his head above the parapet of bland noisemaking, and here the documentary is quite potent at illustrating that the stresses of achieving and building on success are actually just as tough as those involved in getting noticed in the first place. On a more generic level, it does point out how tough this industry is, how hard people work to achieve little better than a subsistence existence and at just how transitory and fickle it all can be, but I did tire a little of the also-rans who whined on about sexploitation and objectification as if they'd had been living under a rock for most of their lives. They dreamt of success and acknowledgement in an industry that was/is riddled with sexualisation and somehow it came as a shock to them - pissed and stoned as they invariably were. Real talent is the best fast-track to initiate meaningful and lasting change. It's an interesting fly-on-the-wall style of production with loads of archive, busily edited to leave us with an authentic-looking view on the lives of these people, but I felt most of them really had no idea what they were doing and the fact that 9/11 occurred midway through the chronology of the narrative seemed merely designed to attempt to bedrock this otherwise flighty and shallow assessment of a music industry that took me back to those nights in the pub, with the folk singers who sounded great after eight pints, but who had no shelf-life beyond that!

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