BOWIE: THE FINAL ACT
Illuminating film that zigzags through Bowie’s career to bring new insights to his artistic life.
By Peter Watts
“A force so powerful it can distort time itself…”: Bowie at Glastonbury, 2000
HAYLEY MADDEN/REDFERNS
C4/DOGWOOF
9/10
DAVID Bowie has been served with some outstanding documentaries in recent years, from the granular detail of the Five Years trilogy to the celebratory montage of Moonage Daydream. But Bowie: The Final Act – in cinemas on Boxing Day, and on Channel 4 on January 2 for the 10th anniversary of Bowie’s death – is the best of the lot. That’s partly because of what has gone before. Having seen the competition, director John Stiasny can avoid the most documented, mythologised parts of Bowie’s career – namely Ziggy and Berlin – to create an essay on mortality and creativity as much as a biography.