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‘Montage’ reveals Cobain’s unseen sides

The Columbian
Published: August 6, 2015, 5:00pm

Kurt Cobain and Courtney Love were goofing off at home when she asked him one of the most fundamental questions about his public perception.

“Why are you the good one and I’m the bad one?” she asked, teasingly, about how the media portrayed their stormy romantic relationship.

“I used my illusion,” Cobain said, mocking the LP title from Guns N’ Roses, then-rivals to his rock band, Nirvana.

Cobain’s witty self-awareness is one of many new and heartrending sides of him brought to light in Brett Morgen’s new HBO documentary, “Cobain: Montage of Heck.” Assembled over eight years with unprecedented access to the Cobain family’s private archives, Morgen has crafted an often brilliant, sometimes overheated but always humane documentary, one in which Nirvana’s music and fame are just the scaffolding for Cobain’s inner life.

But Cobain knew all about the fog that envelopes life, art and public perception. “Montage of Heck” is revelatory in that it finds a whole new angle on one of rock music’s most beloved and well-documented figures. For all its intimacy, though, the film is also a reminder of just how contradictory and unknowable everybody is at heart, especially to themselves.

Even for the most die-hard Nirvana fans, there’s much in “Montage” that will surprise, delight and upset them all over again. Home movies show Kurt as a bubbly infant and irrepressible toddler; and reams of notebook art and journal entries show the constant churn of his imagination.

Midcareer footage of Cobain and Love pantomiming angry fan letters and splashing in the tub with their baby daughter, Frances, prove that his loyalties to his embattled young family ran just as deep, perhaps deeper, than his commitment to Nirvana being the best rock band on the planet.

The film’s big revelations — that Love admitted to briefly using heroin while pregnant with Frances, that Cobain made a previous suicide attempt as a teenager after an attempt to lose his virginity — are treated deftly and quietly, as part of a larger, often impressionist picture of Cobain’s emotional life. Interviews with his father, stepmother and early girlfriend offer previously unheard perspectives that add depth to the total portrait.

This film shows, more than any other Cobain document, his battle between total immersion in his art and family and a deep-seated fear of failing both.

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