Clarence "Coodie" Simmons had gone to significant lengths to ensure West was happy, scrapping plans to first release the footage back in 2005
The first part of seven-hour movie "jeen-yuhs: A Kanye Trilogy" will be released by Netflix on Wednesday.
Image: Courtesy of Netflix
The director of Netflix's new Kanye West documentary was left disappointed—though not surprised—by the controversial rapper's last-minute demand to recut a movie decades in the making, he told AFP.
Clarence "Coodie" Simmons started following his friend West with a camera in 2001, curious to see how far the ambitious young music producer from Chicago could go, and eventually amassed 320 hours of behind-the-scenes footage of his journey to international stardom.
The first part of seven-hour movie "jeen-yuhs: A Kanye Trilogy" will be released by Netflix on Wednesday, but the famously perfectionist West last month took to Instagram demanding "final edit and approval" on the project, in order to "be in charge of my own image."
"I told Kanye he had to have 100 percent trust in this film ... he said he trusted," said Simmons.