You're Gonna Miss Me | Rotten Tomatoes
Rotten Tomatoes

Movies / TV

    Celebrity

      No Results Found

      View All
      Movies Tv shows Shop News Showtimes

      You're Gonna Miss Me

      2005 1h 32m Documentary List
      85% 20 Reviews Tomatometer 73% 5,000+ Ratings Audience Score Filmmaker Keven McAlester explores the life of legendary vocalist and songwriter Roger Kynard "Roky" Erickson, who, during the '60s, fronted the influential rock 'n' roll band 13th Floor Elevators. Following extensive psychedelic drug use and a stint in a mental hospital, Roky spent the greater part of the last four decades suffering from schizophrenia. McAlester finds Roky living with his brother, who has aided in his recovery and encouraged his return to music. Read More Read Less

      Audience Reviews

      View All (111) audience reviews
      Audience Member A fascinating and emotional documentary about the former 13th Floor Elevators front mans struggles with mental illness. There are definitely some skeletons in the Erikson family closet. A must see. Rated 5 out of 5 stars 01/20/23 Full Review Audience Member Very interesting film, and plenty depressing. But while I respect the filmmakers' decision to put across the complexity of Erikson's situation, I wish they had dug a little deeper into Roky himself. As we see him, he's a fascinating enigma, but I get the feeling they left out a whole lot. The film is only 90 minutes; it should be longer. That said, it's an interesting watch. If you care at all for music made in the past 40 years, you need to realize what an inspiration this guy was, and continues to be, for musicians across the board. That alone should be reason enough to see it. Rated 4 out of 5 stars 02/25/23 Full Review Audience Member Sad, disturbing study of musician Roky Erickson and his family. Rated 3 out of 5 stars 02/27/23 Full Review Audience Member You're Gonna Miss Me (Keven McAlester, 2005) You're Gonna Miss Me, which looks at the post-musical life (one cannot call it a career) of psych-rock pioneer and legendary schizophrenic Roky Erickson, is one of the most harrowing things I have ever seen on celluloid. It is also well-nigh incoherent, and since I watched it I've spent a good deal of time weighing whether this was intentional on the part of McAlester (The Dungeon Masters), as a kind of mirroring of Erickson's own thought processes, or whether that even matters (as clever/possibly brilliant as the idea is). I've come to the reluctant conclusion that it doesn't, and that something a little more straightforward would've gotten the job done a lot better than this did-which I rush to add in no way mitigates the straight-up creep factor this movie produces, which is almost unheard-of in the documentary realm. We begin with an arresting scene, in which Roky's little brother Sumner Erickson is testifying that he, not their mother, should be Roky's legal guardian, alleging that, basically, she's messed him up for the past thirty-five years. Powerful stuff. We then trade off scenes of Roky's life today with documentary bits about the rise and fall of the 13th Floor Elevators and the Aliens. (We eventually come back round to that courtroom scene towards the end of the film, after we've gotten to know Roky's mother even better than we've gotten to know Roky.) Pretty basic documentary technique, but (a) the historical bits seem almost unfinished; there's little snippets of interviews at the beginning with big-name folks like Patti Smith and Billy Gibbons, but those die off pretty quickly, and (b) the present-day bits featuring Roky seem as if they're there solely to create that creeptastic atmosphere, as contrasted to the present-day bits featuring Roky's mother, which are equally creeptastic, but at least move the story forward. But my ultimate complaint is that the film raises a lot of questions, and then never even attempts to answer any of them. The most obvious is how much of Roky's current state has to do with his incredible, massive drug abuse, how much has to do with the electroshock treatments he was subjected to while locked up in an asylum, and how much is genetic. (I'm no psychologist, but it seems to me you can't watch this movie and not come away well aware that crazy runs deep in the Erickson family.) Perhaps there is no real answer, at least not a definitive one, but no one even tries. We get a lot of bitter sniping from various family members, all of which goes nowhere. Etc. There are a lot of very interesting threads to be found here, but all are left ragged and incomplete. With a little more planning, a little more asking of the right questions, this could have been one of the great musical documentaries of all time. As it is, it's remarkably like the music of Roky Erickson and the Aliens-a curiosity that seems earnest, but that still has someone in the background looking at how to best hook the rubes come to look at the freaks. *** Rated 3 out of 5 stars 02/11/23 Full Review Audience Member A sad documentary about the demise of a psychedelic 60s rock star from drug use and later shock therapy whilst being institutionalised for insanity (his lawyer's way of getting him off other legal charges). Roky is diagnosed with schizophrenia and leads a life of poverty and filth, monitored by his aging mum until his youngest brother petitions for guardianship. Truly a moving and at times upsetting doco about this man's life, my only qualm being a somewhat rushed ending. This is definitely worth checking out. Rated 4 out of 5 stars 02/09/23 Full Review Audience Member A bit scattered, but fascinating nonetheless. Rated 3.5 out of 5 stars 01/12/23 Full Review Read all reviews Post a rating

      This movie is featured in the following articles.

      Critics Reviews

      View All (20) Critics Reviews
      Joshua Rothkopf Time Out Rated: 3/5 Nov 17, 2011 Full Review Ted Fry Seattle Times Like any good documentary, this one releases information slowly and sometimes with startling abruptness. Rated: 3/4 Aug 24, 2007 Full Review Frank Scheck Hollywood Reporter There's an undeniable fascination to watching the extensive footage of Erickson, whose yowling, manic vocals on display in the extensive archival performance footage contrasts dramatically with scenes of him in more recent times. Jun 20, 2007 Full Review Kathy Fennessy Seattle Film Blog You may think you've heard this story before--and maybe you have--but that doesn't make it any less compelling. And the parallels with Be Here to Love Me: A Film about Townes Van Zandt and The Devil and Daniel Johnston are hard to deny. Rated: 3/4 Mar 29, 2024 Full Review Dorothy Woodend The Tyee (British Columbia) One moment of true grace is exactly what You're Gonna Miss Me gives, but the rest of it is pretty interesting as well. Aug 23, 2017 Full Review Annlee Ellingson Boxoffice Magazine Today Roky is actually on tour again, with a number of 2007 musical festival appearances including Coachella -- a development at least worthy of an afterword. Rated: 2.5/5 Aug 30, 2007 Full Review Read all reviews

      Movie Info

      Synopsis Filmmaker Keven McAlester explores the life of legendary vocalist and songwriter Roger Kynard "Roky" Erickson, who, during the '60s, fronted the influential rock 'n' roll band 13th Floor Elevators. Following extensive psychedelic drug use and a stint in a mental hospital, Roky spent the greater part of the last four decades suffering from schizophrenia. McAlester finds Roky living with his brother, who has aided in his recovery and encouraged his return to music.
      Director
      Keven McAlester
      Producer
      Lauren Hollingsworth, Laura Boyd DeSmeth
      Production Co
      Sobriquet Productions
      Genre
      Documentary
      Original Language
      English
      Release Date (DVD)
      Jul 10, 2007
      Box Office (Gross USA)
      $1.3K
      Runtime
      1h 32m