Bon Jovi open up about their new documentary Thank You, Goodnight: The Bon Jovi Story
It's available now on Disney+
Jon Bon Jovi, Tico Torres and David Bryan from Bon Jovi joined Ken Bruce on Greatest Hits Radio to talk about their new Disney+ documentary Thank You, Goodnight: The Bon Jovi Story.
The trio reminisced about the last 40 years, and how the band has grown over the years, with their success and experience. The band also opened up about handing over full control of the documentary to Gotham Chopra the director.
Speaking of handing over control, Jon explained the documentary was: "The whole truth, nothing but the truth."
He continued: "We relinquished all control to the director, which, if you're going to do it, we felt that it should be just to speaking the whole truth. Each of our individual truths, really, and then not to sanitise it to your point."
David Bryan added: "I think at the 40th anniversary, you know it was that's a big milestone. Yeah, I think it was time for us to tell that and in the words of Bon Jovi, ‘We're halfway there', so the second one is going to be out in 40 years from now!"
Jon then opened up about the documentary's name Thank You, Goodnight: The Bon Jovi Story, explaining: "It leaves you open to thought because you know at the end of the day, if you think about it, as I approach the microphone at the end of the night, I'm thanking you for spending a couple of hours of your life with us, and and wishing you well into the good night.
"So that really is how I perceived the title to be, to leave it open-ended, but when you think about how your greetings and you're telling someone to farewell into the good night. That's what I thought about the time."
Watch the full Bon Jovi interview below:
Ken then asked Tico about the last 40 years and whether they have been good or bad, with the drummer admitting: "Who can remember? I mean, that's why we have this film, so we could actually remember. It's been a ride, it's still a ride.
"What's amazing is to watch ourselves grow up on camera and I couldn't believe there was that much material, that we could actually look at ourselves and that they found and Gotham Chopra did an amazing job being a detective to search out and be able to put in the way he saw it, to our valid story."
Speaking about the footage used in the documentary, Jon then added: "You know, David (Bryan) was saying something yesterday that that resonated with me, we were talking about how his dad, when David and I were teenagers, had a brown van and that Gotham actually sought out and found footage of a brown van to underline the story that we were telling, you know, and this van looked like the original brown van from the 70s, going over a certain bridge in New Jersey. How he found footage to accompany that story.. fascinating, but that's what a good filmmaker is capable of."
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