
Death By Audio, an underground venue, is forced to close in 2014. The film focuses on the struggles of maintaining a community in the face of Brooklyn property development, hostile construction workers and a one billion-dollar company.... (Full plot summary below)
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Death By Audio, an underground venue, is forced to close in 2014. The film focuses on the struggles of maintaining a community in the face of Brooklyn property development, hostile construction workers and a one billion-dollar company.
Leave your thoughts about Goodnight Brooklyn: The Story of Death By Audio.
| The Sunday AgeCraig MathiesonMatt Conboy's documentary captures both the unstoppable change and strange conflagration of the final weeks where construction work happens each day with a farewell gig each night. |
| The Stranger (Seattle, WA)Dave SegalWhat makes Goodnight Brooklyn more interesting than most stories of its ilk, however, is the lethal irony at its core. |
| The New York TimesGlenn KennyThe movie is not boring as such, but because it is a chronicle told almost entirely by the people behind the space (Mr. Conboy being one of them), it is relentlessly personal — there’s no genuine cultural critique. |
| Village VoiceAaron HillisThe footage relies more on idealistic testimonies than a cinematic experience showcasing DBA's vitality. |
| User ReviewbrockcheeseGoodnight Brooklyn is the kind of film where "Show, Don't Tell" does not apply. The entire film relies off of carefully detailed responses to the feud between the music scene and Vice rather than depicting the culture, music, or conflict through film. |