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Kanye West documentary maker ‘disappointed’ by Netflix editing row

The director of Netflix's new Kanye West documentary was left disappointed, though not surprised, by the controversial rapper's last-minute demand to recut a movie decades in the making.

Andrew Marszal (Agence France-Presse)
Los Angeles, United States
Mon, February 14, 2022

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Kanye West documentary maker ‘disappointed’ by Netflix editing row Image control: United States rapper Kanye West attends the 2020 Vanity Fair Oscar Party following the 92nd Academy Awards on Feb. 9 at The Wallis Annenberg Center for the Performing Arts in Beverly Hills. West has made a last-minute demand for “final edit and approval” rights on the first part of jeen-yuhs: A Kanye Trilogy, a documentary that will be released by Netflix on Feb. 16, 2022. (AFP/Jean-Baptiste Lacroix)

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he director of Netflix's new Kanye West documentary was left disappointed, though not surprised, by the controversial rapper's last-minute demand to recut a movie decades in the making, he told AFP.

Clarence "Coodie" Simmons started following his friend West with a camera in 2001, curious to see how far the ambitious young music producer from Chicago could go, and eventually amassed 320 hours of behind-the-scenes footage of his journey to international stardom.

The first part of the seven-hour documentary film, jeen-yuhs: A Kanye Trilogy, will be released by Netflix on Wednesday, but the famously perfectionist West took to Instagram last month demanding "final edit and approval" on the project in order to "be in charge of my own image”.

"I told Kanye he had to have 100 percent trust in this film, [...] he said he trusted," said Simmons. "So, when I saw that Instagram, I was a bit disappointed."

As recently as last week, West, now known as Ye, continued to issue demands, such as having fellow rap superstar Drake take over the narration.

Ironically, Simmons had gone to significant lengths to ensure that West was happy, scrapping plans to first release the footage back in 2005 because West "said he wasn't ready for the world to see the real him”.

The pair later grew apart and Simmons had little access to West for the next decade or so.

But in a seeming reconciliation, West showed up at a Hollywood screening of the documentary on Friday, hugging Simmons and telling the audience that "people try to cancel us and we all run away from each other and scatter or we be not talking to each other, not communicating”.

'Put the camera down'

The documentary touches on West's mental health issues, including a bipolar disorder that led to him being hospitalized in 2016 and came under renewed spotlight during his bizarre run for the US presidency in 2020.

Filming a meeting two years ago in which West ranted to real estate investors that he had taken bipolar medication to "have a normal conversation and turn alien into English”, Simmons felt concerned enough by his friend and subject's behavior to turn off the camera.

"It was my first time ever capturing Kanye in that light," said Simmons, a former comedian and television host.

"I just felt like I had to put the camera down so I could listen and be there for him as a brother and not as a director, so that's the reason I put it down.

"It happened a couple other times where I'm like, 'Okay, let me pay attention.'"

At Friday's screening, West said he had made "what y'all might think are mistakes in public" to show the world that limits imposed on black people are "just a smokescreen”.

"We on labels we don't own, play for basketball teams we don't own. The time is now," he said.

'Carefree' West

The controversy surrounding West's demands for creative control over jeen-yuhs has undoubtedly drawn more publicity to the documentary.

But Simmons and codirector Chike Ozah hope that showing West's more vulnerable and sometimes embarrassing moments during his rise to greatness will help the world reassess a figure known for his frequent arrogant and egocentric outbursts.

For instance, Ozah highlights an early scene at diner chain Denny's, where West is celebrating the removal of wires from his jaw following a serious car crash.

"He's only been taking liquid foods so he's dropped some considerable amount of weight, he's got a little six pack," recalled Ozah.

"It's a moment you share with Kanye, where he even takes the camera from Coodie and starts filming Coodie, and he just seems so carefree and so happy.

"That's a moment that you just cherish, to see him in that space."

So, after all these years, is West now ready for the world to see the real him?

"It's not really about him being ready [...] I would hope that he will see this film," said Simmons.

"The world needs to see this," he added. "It's not about me and Kanye."

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