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Backstreet Boys: Show 'Em What You're Made Of

✭ ✭   Read critic reviews

United Kingdom, United States · 2015
1h 41m
Director Stephen Kijak
Starring Nick Carter, Howie Dorough, Brian Littrell, AJ McLean
Genre Documentary, Music

A behind-the-scenes look at the popular boy band, Backstreet Boys.

Stream Backstreet Boys: Show 'Em What You're Made Of

What are people saying?

What are critics saying?

40

Time Out London by

This tale of the manufactured pop group – fractured by fall-outs and drug abuse and now trying to ‘find’ themselves as they reflect on their career – is nauseating even for a long-term fan.

70

Village Voice by Amy Nicholson

Show 'Em What You're Made Of convincingly argues that these boy-men have something to say about the fickleness of fate — something they knew more about as young men than any of the cynics who dismissed them for dancing in unison. The hardest part will be convincing people to listen.

40

New York Daily News by Elizabeth Weitzman

True, the Boys are thoughtful and eloquent, and the whole package is engaging enough to hold even a newcomer’s attention, but the end result is an incomplete story of a forgotten band hoping to celebrate — or should I say sell-abrate — an anniversary no one else remembered.

40

The Hollywood Reporter by Frank Scheck

Director Stephen Kijak, who previously explored far more compelling musical territory with Scott Walker: 30 Century Man, has delivered a behind-the-scenes portrait that should please the band's diehard fans but offers little of substance to the uninitiated.

30

The New York Times by Neil Genzlinger

It is insight-free and cliché-heavy, with the five sharing obvious reminiscences about the thrill of superstardom, visiting haunts from their youth, shooting baskets and occasionally rehearsing.

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