The work captures the hypnotic feel of 1970s New York and the music of Reed’s band pulling the audience into an acid trip with vibrant colours, rotating angles and the sound of psychedelic America. Haynes pushes the boundaries set by modern documentaries, using split screens and relying mostly on voice overs, with sparing on-camera interviews. It also explores the difference in culture between LA and New York, with drummer Maureen Tucker still expressing her disdain for hippie culture, 50 years on. The film takes the approach of joining the dots together, exploring how the members came together and how they were so influential yet so subtle about it. The feature follows the rise of the rock group from their formation, also going into detail about the childhoods and upbringings of Lou Reed and John Cale, whose Welsh nationalist grandmother banned English in his house for the first few years of his life despite his father being an Englishman. Contrasting the two aforementioned films, this title doesn’t take such an emotionally intricate approach, instead looking at the band within their time and place, 1970s New York, when drugs were everywhere and Andy Warhol ran the town.xpl New to the list is The Velvet Underground by Todd Haynes, whose 1998 documentary Velvet Goldmine won the Special Jury Prize for Best Artistic Contribution at Cannes. There has been a slew of quality music documentaries over the past few years, from Asif Kapadia’s Amy to Andrew Dominik’s One More Time with Feeling, which studies Nick Cave’s personal loss.