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Drive Well, Sleep Carefully - On the Road with Death Cab for Cutie Reviews

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    John K.

    John K.

    from IN

    Drive Well, Sleep Carefully - On the Road with DCfC

    Reviewed on 11/29/07
    Plays: 126
    m4cbeth rated this product 5 out of 5 stars

    Drive Well, Sleep Carefully - On the Road with Death Cab for Cutie, Movie DVDs, Movies & TV Shows. great documentary of Death cab for cutie....live footage and great behind the scenes!

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    Transcript of Video Review

    Hey what's up Expo TV? I'm here to talk about Drive Well Sleep Carefully: On the Road with Death Cab for Cutie a film by Justin Mitchell. Let's watch a little clip a bit. [film clip playing] We're gonna mute them just so you can hear me talking. Basically if you haven't heard Death Cab for Cutie they're a really I guess indie -- I guess you can call them indie or whatever you want to call them-- band definitely something to relax to or have fun with. On the Road this is like a documentary. I guess you can say a documentary-esque type of DVD following Death Cab for Cutie with lots of live footage as you can see here. The song they were just performing was Transatlanticism off their Transatlanticism record. On the back it has live performances in different locations on tour like in Birmingham or Austin Dallas Portland. There are different songs. Some of the songs include The New Year We Laugh Indoors Styrofoam Plates (which is a great song) Title and Registration Company Calls Tiny Vessels and lots more. DVD extras include rehearsal for Stability Lightness demo montage. Lots of other stuff like an acoustic set which is pretty freaking sweet. Lots of other ones like interviews and whatnot. So if you like Death Cab for Cutie you should check this DVD out; it'll definitely be well worth it. If you wanna get into them this is worth it too. So you could kind of get a feel of the band who they are. I've seen Death Cab for Cutie live. They're pretty nice they're pretty awesome to see. This just kind of brings back memories of the show. No I'm not getting emotional or anything. But it's a really good show really great to see. So check it out. It's the Drive Well Sleep Carefully: On the Road with Death Cab for Cutie DVD.

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    Drive Well, Sleep Carefully - On The Road With Death Cab [region Free] Dvd Drive Well, Sleep Carefully - On The Road With Death Cab [region Free] Dvd

    The on-the-road life of an indie-rock band about to take a giant leap towards the mainstream forms the focus for this documentary from director...

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    Drive Well, Sleep Carefully - On the Road with Death Cab for Cutie Drive Well, Sleep Carefully - On the Road with Death Cab for Cutie

    Drive Well Sleep Carefully joins Death Cab for Cutie on tour in the spring of 2004. Filmmaker Justin Mitchell captured dozens of shows across the...

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    Drive Well, Sleep Carefully - On the Road with Death Cab for Cutie Drive Well, Sleep Carefully - On the Road with Death Cab for Cutie

    Drive Well Sleep Carefully joins Death Cab for Cutie on tour in the spring of 2004. Filmmaker Justin Mitchell captured dozens of shows across the...

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    Drive Well, Sleep Carefully - On the Road with Death Cab for Cutie

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    4 stars

    based on 2 video reviews

    Gibbard Tunes Up What Filmmaker Justin Mitchell captured in Drive Well, Sleep Carefully is a hybrid concert film and meditation on the strange loneliness and lure of touring. In the spring of 2004, Death Cab for Cutie were on the home stretch of their Transatlantisicm...

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    Summary
    Gibbard Tunes Up What Filmmaker Justin Mitchell captured in Drive Well, Sleep Carefully is a hybrid concert film and meditation on the strange loneliness and lure of touring. In the spring of 2004, Death Cab for Cutie were on the home stretch of their Transatlantisicm tour that spanned three continents over nearly four months. Mitchell ( Dirty Old Town , Songs for Cassavetes ) had never been to a Death Cab show before he hooked up with guitarist and vocalist Ben Gibbard, bassist Nick Harmer, guitarist and sometimes organist Chris Walla, and drummer Jason McGerr to shoot the tour's final three weeks, then met them in their hometown of Seattle for post-road interviews. The documentary catches the band at a moment fraught with possibility: after six years of extended tours, four acclaimed full-length albums, regular name-checks on The O.C. , and the explosion of Gibbard's side project, the Postal Service, they're poised to trade hard-earned indie success for the wider possibilities offered by a contract with Atlantic Records. Gibbard and Walla Join Forces Anyone getting their first look at Death Cab live on this film should expect to be set back on their heels by the band's capacity to tear it up. They're frequently called "poppy," but what transpires onstage is flat-out rock & roll. Mitchell tucks most of the interview and road footage between the film's 13 performances, but when he overlays images with the music or breaks for commentary, the effect is nearly always complementary. "Title and Registration" in New Orleans feels even more bleakly beautiful spliced with rainy bayou road images. "We Looked Like Giants" smoothly detours into Gibbard's musings on young love, then cuts back into the performance for a duel-drum-set jam session. "Styrofoam Plates" gets briefly interrupted for an eloquent digression on the funeral that inspired the lyrics; it's just unfortunate that for the remainder of the song the vocals sound so submerged. Given that most of Death Cab's fans are enamored with their lyrics, the film's major flaw is that they're occasionally buried and indiscernible, particularly when a performance takes a ferocious turn--but in consolation, these smackdowns are when the band seems most in their element. Witnessing this enthusiasm, it's a little surprising to hear that the touring life has become mundane. Aside from the occasional ascent up the speakers to keep things lively, they're fighting this sensation by putting themselves in the mindset of the folks at their shows. For Harmer, playing huge rooms has made him obsessed with the guys in the back: "Are they rockin' out?" Walla says that he's been making more eye contact with fans on this tour "just to see what's going on," and he's delighted by the huge grins that elicits. On the Road Again Due to their relentless schedule and the "comfy cocoon" of their new tour bus, shows provide their only opportunity to connect and glimpse the impact they're making outside of the dream state of the tour. As McGerr describes it, "You can't see in front of you or behind you. You're engulfed in a fog, and you don't know what things will look like when the fog lifts." This film draws viewers to the edge of this fog to sense its charmed disorientation. DVD Features The whirlwind nature of the project (compared to, say, the seven years of film that went into DiG! ) presumably didn't leave Mitchell the luxury of a ton of spare footage, but the disc includes several worthwhile extras. An acoustic set of three songs at San Francisco's Metreon comes with some fun banter (Walla declaring his reverence for Sarah Vowell, Gibbard jokingly deflecting a question about his side project), and the stripped-down performance offers a spare beauty uncommon at their electrified shows. The "Stability" rehearsal is marred by the muddy, distant quality of the vocals, but the instruments are solid, and it's interesting to see their practice space. The Full Crew The additional interviews include a demonstration of drummer McGerr's rhythmic prowess; a story about the band embracing the slickest stage they ever played and, in Harmer's words, "turning it into the Death Cab on Ice Show" (Gibbard: "I must have fell five or six times on my ass"); and more historical details from "producer, sometimes-arranger-type" Walla on the Hall of Justice studios, a building that, before--becoming the secret headquarters for tracking and mixing The Photo Album and much of Transatlanticism --witnessed the creation of Nirvana's Bleach . The Andycam feature will be most enjoyed by expats of Spokane, WA, for a drunken late-night walking tour of their city, including perhaps the most hilarious 10 seconds of the entire film--the grim look on Gibbard's face as the camera pans the only nightclub they could locate. But the best extra is an intense, gorgeous demo version of "Lightness" with vocal percussion, playing over a triumphant tour montage. If only the circular nature of Transatlanticism hadn't precluded burying this treasure at the end. --Mari Malcolm Recommended Death Cab for Cutie Discography Transatlanticism , 2003 The Photo Album , 2001 We Have the Facts and We're Voting Yes , 2000 Forbidden Love EP Something About Airplanes , 1999 You Can Play These Songs with Chords , 2002 More Music Documentaries from Plexifilm I Am Trying to Break Your Heart: A Film About Wilco Moog Low in Europe
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