his documentary feels really personal. it’s not flashy or inspirational, it’s just yung lean going through stuff while the camera’s there. you see how fast everything happened for him and how unprepared he was for it, which honestly makes the whole fame thing look kind of depressing.
what i liked is that it doesn’t try to clean anything up. there’s no big moment where everything suddenly makes sense. it’s AWKWARD, uncomfortable, and sometimes hard to watch, but that’s what makes it feel real. the empty feeling he has even when he’s successful is probably the most relatable part.
overall, in my head feels less like a music documentary and more like a reminder that blowing up young doesn’t mean you’re okay. it’s quiet, sad, and honest in a way that sticks with you.
Love him
his documentary feels really personal. it’s not flashy or inspirational, it’s just yung lean going through stuff while the camera’s there. you see how fast everything happened for him and how unprepared he was for it, which honestly makes the whole fame thing look kind of depressing.
what i liked is that it doesn’t try to clean anything up. there’s no big moment where everything suddenly makes sense. it’s AWKWARD, uncomfortable, and sometimes hard to watch, but that’s what makes it feel real. the empty feeling he has even when he’s successful is probably the most relatable part.
overall, in my head feels less like a music documentary and more like a reminder that blowing up young doesn’t mean you’re okay. it’s quiet, sad, and honest in a way that sticks with you.
Love him