First of all I don't concider a floating bridge as art, not even if they decorate it with a colorful ground layer. But I can understand if people find this art, everyone is entitled to his opinion and what is art for someone is something else for somebody else. I certainly do not understand why anybody in his right mind would pay more than 2 million for a big piece or 250000 dollars for a tiny piece of that art. But again everybody does whatever they like to and if you're swimming in money be my guest. That said I did enjoy watching this documentary about Christo and his Floating Piers. It was sometimes laughable to watch how they all stressed about their project, and I do enjoy watching people bickering about futile things. And that you get a lot in this documentary as most of those people are impossible to live with. Their constant annoying arguing is funny to watch on a big screen, not so sure if I could stand to talk with them in real life for more than ten minutes though. The documentary is well shot, it's interesting even if you're not really a fan like I wasn't. They can tell me I don't understand the art, or the concept, it doesn't really matter, it's still funny to watch just to study human behavior. Christo is definitely excentric, impossible to work with, arrogant to a level he becomes annoying but still fun to watch. Fun to watch also was the "elite" of rich people, the "special" guests that were sucking up to him, doing anything to have a micro second of a conversation with the artist. Those were probably the people that bought his work for those astonishing high sums, pretty pathetic but again funny to watch. In conclusion, it's worth a watch, it's well made, it's interesting.