someoneyouknow
Literotica Guru
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- Jun 5, 2006
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Snip from the full article:
Kapadia says he did not set out to blame anyone for Winehouse's death.
"I'm not pointing the finger, I'm just saying this is really complicated," he said. "But there are issues, and there are maybe things that could have been done differently.
"It's turning the mirror on everyone, saying, we're all slightly to blame, complicit, a part of this system — this circus — that it became."
He hopes members of the family will come to see the film the way he does — as a rounded portrait of Winehouse, and a tribute to her.
"I'm hoping with a bit of hindsight that there'll be a rethinking of it. Not to take things personally but to just say, look, people love her, that's the thing. It's about her and kind of rebalancing everyone's image of her."
The film gives ample time to Winehouse's music, from the jazz sounds on her first album, "Frank," to the soul and hip-hop influences that infused her breakthrough record, "Back to Black."
The single "Rehab" was her biggest hit, and also something of an albatross. Winehouse was constantly asked to perform the song about how "They tried to make me go to rehab — I said no, no, no."
Kapadia said that in retrospect the song sounds like "an incredible cry for help."
"The clue is always in her songs," he said. "Two songs: 'Stronger Than Me' — 'I want someone who's stronger than me' — and 'Love is a Losing Game,' sum her up. If she had those two elements, then maybe there would have been some peace."
So there you have it. No one is to blame for her death but everyone on the planet except the drunk drug user is responsible for her death.
Moron.
http://abcnews.go.com/Entertainment/wireStory/amy-winehouse-director-share-blame-death-31122241
Kapadia says he did not set out to blame anyone for Winehouse's death.
"I'm not pointing the finger, I'm just saying this is really complicated," he said. "But there are issues, and there are maybe things that could have been done differently.
"It's turning the mirror on everyone, saying, we're all slightly to blame, complicit, a part of this system — this circus — that it became."
He hopes members of the family will come to see the film the way he does — as a rounded portrait of Winehouse, and a tribute to her.
"I'm hoping with a bit of hindsight that there'll be a rethinking of it. Not to take things personally but to just say, look, people love her, that's the thing. It's about her and kind of rebalancing everyone's image of her."
The film gives ample time to Winehouse's music, from the jazz sounds on her first album, "Frank," to the soul and hip-hop influences that infused her breakthrough record, "Back to Black."
The single "Rehab" was her biggest hit, and also something of an albatross. Winehouse was constantly asked to perform the song about how "They tried to make me go to rehab — I said no, no, no."
Kapadia said that in retrospect the song sounds like "an incredible cry for help."
"The clue is always in her songs," he said. "Two songs: 'Stronger Than Me' — 'I want someone who's stronger than me' — and 'Love is a Losing Game,' sum her up. If she had those two elements, then maybe there would have been some peace."
So there you have it. No one is to blame for her death but everyone on the planet except the drunk drug user is responsible for her death.
Moron.
http://abcnews.go.com/Entertainment/wireStory/amy-winehouse-director-share-blame-death-31122241