A new trailer for upcoming documentary Omar and Cedric: If This Ever Gets Weird has been released, showing glimpses of the friendship behind the bands The Mars Volta and At The Drive-In. Watch it below.

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The clip, issued yesterday (October 31) by Oscilloscope Laboratories, comprises a montage of archival footage from the vault of Mars Volta co-founder and guitarist Omar Rodriguez-Lopez, with narration about his close and prolific – though stormy – relationship over the decades with Cedric Bixler-Zavala.

“I’m glad that God has put us in the same place and the same time,” he says. “At least this time, I guess.” Omar and Cedric: If This Ever Gets Weird is set for theatrical release in the US on November 20.

The official description for the film reads: “A film that charts the artistic and personal relationship between two era-defining artists, Omar Rodríguez-López and Cedric Bixler-Zavala (At the Drive-In/The Mars Volta), told almost entirely through hundreds of hours of self-shot footage filmed by Omar over the last 40 years.”

The Texas-formed band released six studio albums between 2003 and 2012 before splitting due to a falling-out between founding members Bixler-Zavala and Rodríguez-López. In the years that followed, the pair formed new group Antemasque and resurrected At the Drive-In for a new record in 2017.

“I spent hours on the phone with Omar Rodríguez-López in February 2020. He told me the story of his and Cedric Bixler-Zavala’s life together. It blew my mind,” Omar and Cedric: If This Ever Gets Weird director Nicolas Jack Davies says in a press statement.

“Before the end of that month I flew to meet Omar in Puerto Rico where we chatted for another day and my excitement to bring to life such a story as a film grew exponentially.”

The Mars Volta, 2022. CREDIT: Fat Bob

The decision to return to The Mars Volta was because “it’s family,” Bixler-Zavala explained to NME in a 2022 interview. “It’s an old family friend that we wanted to start communicating with again. It just took some time to get it right.” Re-releasing their previous material in 2021 “helped us close the door on the past and usher in the future,” he added.

The Mars Volta released their self-titled comeback record in September 2022. The return effort scored a glowing five-star review from NME‘s Andy Price, who wrote: “‘The Mars Volta’ is a record that seizes the attention instantly, peppered as it is with arresting top-lines. But it also demands – and handsomely rewards – repeated listens, by virtue of its meticulously assembled arrangements (just bathe your ears in shining third single ‘Vigil”s luxuriant mix).”

The post Watch trailer for new Mars Volta documentary, revealing the friendship behind the band appeared first on NME.