
You See Me Laughin' is a personal journey into the lives and music of the last of the hill country bluesmen who've kept their music alive on the back porches and in the tiny juke joints of the Mississippi backwoods.... (Full plot summary below)
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You See Me Laughin' is a personal journey into the lives and music of the last of the hill country bluesmen who've kept their music alive on the back porches and in the tiny juke joints of the Mississippi backwoods.
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| Village VoiceLaura SinagraIt introduces us to the Fat Possum label's roster of self-taught players against a backdrop of poverty and otherworldly Delta remoteness. |
| New York TimesA.O. ScottA churning, affectionate group portrait, a cinematic pendant to a New Yorker piece Jay McInerney wrote about Fat Possum a few years back. |
| User Reviewmax pthis movie had a great influence on me the music is timeless |
| User ReviewEric SHvor livsbekræftende kan det lige blive at have "the blues"?!? Hvem der dog bare havde chancen for et kig ind i Junior Kimbroughs Juke Joint. |
| User ReviewPrivate UIncredibley poetic, powerful and enjoyable. To music historians and enthusiasts, this documentary paints a vivid portrait of some of the great unheard bluesmen of our time. |
| User ReviewJoseph CFat Possum records probably began somewhere in Holly Springs, Mississippi at Junior Kimbrough's Juke Joint. The foundation of the label was paved with music from Junior, RL Burnside, Cedell Davis, and T Mobile Ford. An original blues phenomenon totally untouched by civilization. Special appearances by Iggy Pop, and THE BLUES EXPLOSION! |
| User ReviewPhillip OThe last of the hill country bluesmen. A dying but essential world, captured on film. |
| User ReviewShaun K Lan amazing Documentary, about some really fascinating Mississippi country bluesmen who don't play the blues to become rich or become famous they just play for themselves and because they love to play the blues. The makers of the documentary (who have a recording company) goal has been to record these guys and get there music out there, to share there music with the world. Each bluesman has a story to tell about life in Mississippi. These men are old storytellers taking about life through the Blues. They are interesting characters who have lead very colourful lives. I feel bluesmen are the last really great storytellers. There is something about the Blues that just draws you in, you don't have to be a great singer or guitar player to sing the blues it about the emotion of what they are singing. |
| User ReviewMartin BOne toothed guitar-picking, butter knife fretting really makes for an interesting documentary. |