According to a rather poor article that I came across, Sergio's documentary will be available in April - not clear as to where or when. They also had the title wrong - "IN THE SKY OF JOY." I will check with John Scheinfeld for further info.
Steve--Will the PBS viewing be part of the My Music series produced by TJ Lubinsky? These music shows are fabulous--even the pledge breaks are entertaining.I received this yesterday from John Scheinfeld:
There’s some good news to share about the Sergio Mendes documentary. Unfortunately, COVID curtailed/delayed distribution of the film which, as you’ll remember, had its world premiere at the 2020 Santa Barbara International Film Festival. However, HBO Latin America has licensed the full-length feature and it will premiere on HBO Brazil on April 24th. It will then be available on HBO in Mexico, all Spanish language speaking countries in the Caribbean, as well as in Central America and South America. Sergio and I will be doing a virtual press tour on April 14th to compliment the big PR push that will be put on by HBO Latin America.
US distribution has been a bit more challenging. The distributor has opted to create and license a short version of the film…60 minutes…to PBS which will premiere in June during the pledge period. Sergio recorded an interview a few weeks back which will become part of the actual pledge breaks. If it performs well, more stations will air it in the August pledge period The full length version will appear on multiple streaming platforms in October. Details are yet to be worked out.
Just ballpark guessing here, but---I'd say it was 15 minutes of Sergio's background, 30 minutes of Brasil '66-'77 and "Never Gonna Let You Go". Then 15 minutes of the current period---which actually allowed me to understand and appreciate what he's been doing and who he's been doing it with more than I have until now.Michael--Approximately what percent of the documentary was from his career preceeding and then including the Brasil 66 & 77 era versus his latest period with rap? The promo trailer on YouTube suggested his current period held sway.
Thanks for the info.Just ballpark guessing here, but---I'd say it was 15 minutes of Sergio's background, 30 minutes of Brasil '66-'77 and "Never Gonna Let You Go". Then 15 minutes of the current period---which actually allowed me to understand and appreciate what he's been doing and who he's been doing it with more than I have until now.
I guess the intention was to run the abridged version on PBS here in the US. I see on the HBO site in Brazil that it is airing regularly (need to use a VPN with a node in Brazil to view the site), but I wasn't able to find any way to view it. The full version is 96 minutes long.It aired here in Sacramento last night late. I DVRd it and we just watched it back. Very nice. Not the tour de force that Herb’s was, but a really solid documentary. My wife is more of a fan than she was 90 minutes ago.
I’d be interested in seeing an uncut version. Allowing for pledge breaks, there couldn’t have been more than 60 minutes of content.
Michael--one more question--does the documentary show any new video from the late 60s and early 70s that we haven't already seen on YouTube?Just ballpark guessing here, but---I'd say it was 15 minutes of Sergio's background, 30 minutes of Brasil '66-'77 and "Never Gonna Let You Go". Then 15 minutes of the current period---which actually allowed me to understand and appreciate what he's been doing and who he's been doing it with more than I have until now.
lJ: I can't answer that. I haven't spent a lot of time looking for Sergio material on YouTube. Most of what I saw was new to me and in stunningly good quality.Michael--one more question--does the documentary show any new video from the late 60s and early 70s that we haven't already seen on YouTube?