Brett Morgan's film about Kurt Cobain will be an ''embodiment of his character''.

The director has been making a feature based on the late Nirvana frontman's life with his widow, Courtney Love, for the past five years and hopes it will capture all the different parts of the singer's personality.

He told NME magazine: ''It'll be an embodiment of his character. If you think about Kurt, he's a contradiction. He could be sincere and sentimental, and also ironic and sarcastic.

''He was sweet and sour. He was incredibly funny too. The film has to reflect his spirit. The thing about him people might not know too is that he was an incredible visual artist and left behind a treasure chest of comic books, paintings, Super8 films, all sorts.''

Brett also aims to be ''ambitious'' with his film style and is taking inspiration from Pink Floyd's 1982 film 'The Wall', which saw the band's album of the same name play over a cartoon depicting the songs and showing the construction and eventual demolition of a huge dividing wall.

He added: ''We're hoping the Cobain film, that'll hopefully be released in 2014, will be this generation's 'The Wall' - a mix of animation and live action that'll allow the audience to experience Kurt in a way they never have before. It's very ambitious.''

Kurt took his own life in 1994 after struggling with heroin addiction, illness and depression.