Much has been said about musician Kurt Cobain in the two decades since his death but the new documentary, Montage of Heck, is the first film about the Nirvana frontman to have official family support.
With full access to Cobain's journals, artwork and home-video footage, acclaimed filmmaker Brett Morgen constructs an aesthetically unique, deeply humane portrait of a cultural icon whose legacy is still being defined. There are interviews with family members, former bandmates and Cobain's widow, Courtney Love, and a variety of animated sequences, some comprising Cobain's drawings.
"Basically, Courtney Love came to me and said 'Hey there's a whole bunch of stuff, can you put it together and say something with it?'," Morgen told Living.
"She was a huge fan of The Kid Stays In The Picture and she liked that I'd worked with ephemera and photographs. This felt like an opportunity for me to tell one of the first complete Gen-X stories. Complete in that most of us from my generation are still writing our script."