The movie shows a few photos of women on the production line for some un-named company but it doesn't talk about it? Just kind of talks about building business. There was a running-out-space detachment there...like basement builds, we are big! Little mentions, but it should have been more explored. They had space to really talk about the industry (if that was the direction they picked, more on this later) with all the B-roll they used. A lot of wasted space.
Devi was mentioned by Loe Sounds (IIRC, ran out of space on my note card, ha!). She was looking for other women in the industry. This was at 2:08 in a 2:22 minute movie. 4-5ish minutes on how there are some positive changes with diversity and equality in the industry in a still largely white dude industry (which the movie spends most of the time focusing on). Some great comments, and even a kind of dig at the film makers by Fabi Reyna, in this section, but it felt very tacked on. Especially since Fulltone (pedals, not dude) still had more screen time and praise even after being cut from the movie (which is good. Who cares what Mike Fuller has to say anyway? Another dude caught in his own "bubble").
There was a brief good section where Fran talked about doing business wrong and learning the hard way. But it was too short kind of and should've been supplemented by other companies' experiences (there were some mentions, but it was separated by quite of space). Fran should've got more screen time in general. She's been around in electronics forever and been an influence in the industry nearly 30 years. But can't cut from JHS I guess.
The weird thing about Loe is they didn't mention what makes her builds interesting at all (recycled/repurposed enclosures).
Anyway, there was really no discussion about contract building, behind-the-scenes designers, lineages (outside of Line 6/Strymon/Meris), and the actual industry side. There could've been some really great exploring there and tie influences to each other. Like EHX's ties to Fran, Beigel, and a few newer boutique builders. Or DOD/Digitech and their in house kind of promotions (speaking of which, no Tom! DOD doesn't get much mention in the movie outside of a brief thing on Whammy and JHS trashing the analog reverb*). They talked to Malekko (that's a large part of their business). Cusack and Wren&Cuff had photos at the end. Good place to look and explore the diversity and who actually builds the pedals. I know Wren&Cuff is interesting in that they train and use home builders to fill orders...which is cool because it gets skills and tools to people that need jobs with less investment in a factory. Cusack has a supply house that supports DIY in the same complex.
DIY did get discussed a bit and they had Anderton. Mentioned RG Keen, Orman, Usenet, etc. Could've driven the later narrative more.
They missed an important part of AnalogMan's contribution to me: he was an early distro for other builders like Lastgasp, Keeley, etc.
More on Devi's influence: there was some slight talk of the community of builders in the movie. But it came off as white guy's club. That was something I always felt was important about Devi: she influenced and had a community for a lot of people at one time. Heck, years ago she used to talk to me via email just about music (before ILF existed). Nearly any company here or in the shark tank could've illustrated it better. Like everybody pitching in to cover a NAMM booth (Dwarfcraft, SS/BS, Industrial Electric, and Rainger one year I was there...that's three countries represented in one booth). Or Fuzzhugger being a distro for other companies and keeping this forum alive. So many different ways if that was the direction they had chosen (they didn't choose a clear hypothesis, theme, idea for the movie outside of pedals and the builders are cool I think). And even going so far to get into the licensing of designs and how that Devi's designs are built in Wales and US by two different companies (it's a unique thing to explore).
Wasn't Devi a part of Malekko becoming a business (I remember her being one the first pedal demoers for that Barker Assmaster. Like one company helping another was pretty cool to me back then)?
Finally brought up op amps. But, that's about all the technological advances they covered until DSP.
The movie goes into how DSP is the future. Does not talk about digitally controlled analog or how things like Teensy or Arduino have made digital designs more accessible to people. This is one of the few sections that got a heading. But they quickly moved away from it. Does not once mention the Spin FV-1 or how the creator was a former Alesis guy that worked on synths and split off to build his own designs for audio processing (and has an office pretty close to Fulltone...they could've driven over there). Like there was lead-ins about technological influences and then it would go away to some dude playing guitar or like "crazy sounds!" Just felt scatterbrained (like this review? ha!). Could've talked about Frogg and all that.
No mention of Lastgasp (over 20 years as a company). Katanasound got a photo in the end. No mention of Schumann. Or Zoom! Or Ring Modulation! Or modulation really that much at all; most of the pedals considered innovative Were delays or dirt. They could’ve mention music scenes that kept pedals around during the rack era (even the second rack/multifx era of the late 90 early 2k), like Noisecore, Noise in general (another way to integrate Japan),
Klon, Tube Screamer, Nirvana, and other important stuff got about as much screen time as the solo to a Blur song. I like Blur ok, but was any of their solos that important like Nirvana to the pedal industry (and I'm not a Nirvana fan, but they did help bring pedals to more people and are generally important)? Rat and 250 were like flashed on screen.
JHS's backstory felt like it got more screen time than the section diversity section. Is JHS really that big of a player? Honestly, he got more time than Earthquaker (I feel like they are bigger), DOD, and even Boss. However, he is less in the movie than I initially thought he would be. Maybe even more time on his backstory and praise for his company than talk of tube screamer?
I'm glad Andy got some credit (and more screen time than knobs). Weird thing is I think they used some of his narration from Reverb videos over B-roll in the movie to fill space. And his narration kind of started like it was a different movie and then it went away again? I've seen this in a few documentaries where they kind of make two movies and sloppy-slice them into one?
There were weird Reverb infographic timelines that would pop up randomly for no reason at all. They added nothing other than "Hey, RAT and 250 are 4 years apart!"
More weird editing: They do a rare section header for PORTLAND OREGON! Then mention something like it's full of proud, hard working people! Then cut to how Earthquaker is awesome because they do it all local. Akron doesn't get a header? NYC didn't, I don't think. Why Portland (I know lots of companies are there, but it doesn't mention that at all)?
Pedals on screen and pedals being talked about were sometimes from widely different eras. Like "The Japanese took over the industry in the late 1970s!" and show a Maxon Wah-Fuzz or something...like maybe technically from the same decade, but kind of different eras?
Finally mentions that pedals just ain't for guitar players late in the movie. They could've talked about a ton of pedal stuff not on guitar (they mentioned Higher Ground, but nothing about Daft Punk, Acid House (I know people in the UK that would used pedal phasers because they didn't have traditional filters), etc). Mostly guitars which is kind of sad.
Still very little talk outside of USA builders. Japan has had a huge scene for a while. There is some UK stuff in the movie. But they could've looked into how this all became a global economy and talked to some great personalities from all over like Sehat, Lightning Wave, GFI, etc (too many to list...we live in a time of the internet!).
On that note, no real talk about how things have developed in other countries during the boutique boom. I understand there isn't time to cover everything though (I just think things that are actually interesting and could've been explored could've replaced screen time from Vai or Daredevil or b-roll).
DBA had some of the best comments...but they've probably said them in several movies they've been in? haha.
Tech 21 guy had some good comments. Didn't know much about him. Didn't realize they've been around that long.
The biggest problem is the film makers didn't know what they wanted to say or how to focus on one topic. Like if the topic is "how pedals became a global economy," cool, do it. Or "From basement to Broadway...how business evolved in the pedal world." Or Pedals make these sounds/here is how sound has evolved. Or Technology. Or let's meet the builders. Or anything.
With no focus, there is really only general information and no new insight is seen into the industry at all. The editing is disjointed and not concise, especially for a 2hr 22min movie.
I don't even feel like it succeeded as an advertisement for Reverb. Like, if it was, and they followed though, I think it would've been a better movie.
*: Again, JHS is wrong. Roland had an BBD "Hall" reverb in an amp top box. DOD had the first pedal. I wouldn't draw this distinction but, due to bad editing I guess, they introduced reverb by showing studio effect and making an implication on screen that reverb was terrible until the RV-2.
More JHS is wrong: He claims that the 2007 crash lead to people not having enough money to invest in guitars and amps rose to people buying more pedals. That is slightly true. That was the case in the 1990s, early 2k too. They wouldn't have marketed "Grunge," "Death Metal," etc to people if they could afford to have and play a freaking full stack with a custom Jackson. haha. Most people I know had a Zoom 505 for a headphone amp and a crate amp or something. Want to not sound like a crate amp? $30 DOD!