Jonathon Norcross is a feature writer for Collider. He's also written for People, InsideHook, and Brooklyn Magazine, among other outlets. He co-produced the feature documentary Break the Game, which ...
Dig!, Ondi Timoner’s documentary about frenemy bands The Brian Jonestown Massacre and The Dandy Warhols, premiered at the 2004 Sundance Film Festival, where it won the Documentary Grand Jury Prize.
At the height of its failure, every day was Altamont for the Brian Jonestown Massacre, the San Francisco outfit founded in 1990 by Anton Newcombe, the Klaus Kinski of psychedelic rock. Just in time ...
I have been in this business for a long time. And in that time I have realized many of my professional dreams. But one dream persists. It’s a modest dream, but it is mine: I want to write the liner ...
Ross Bonaime is the Senior Film Editor at Collider. He is a Virginia-based critic, writer, and editor who has written about all forms of entertainment for Paste Magazine, Brightest Young Things, ...
The year is 1996, and a psychedelic rock band with revolution in their ears and methamphetamine in their veins are in full flow at the Viper Room in Los Angeles. The Brian Jonestown Massacre, led by ...
Step one: get a ticket to see The Dandy Warhols at the Moroccan Lounge. Step two: watch the 2004 documentary Dig!, which chronicles the parallel but vastly different 1990s trajectories of Portland ...
Back in 1996, young filmmaker Ondi Timoner had an ambitious plan: She would follow 10 young underground rock bands for one year and film them, as they all reached for their respective grip on a brass ...
The Dandy Warhols are the quintessential rebel rocker band. Prominently featured in the documentary Dig!, their love-hate relationship with the Brian Jonestown Massacre gave us a glimpse of their ...