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Documental sobre el famoso festival de Woodstock que tuvo lugar en Bethel, NY. En agosto de 1969, 450.000 personas asistieron al mayor festival de música rock hasta la fecha. "Woodstock", ganadora del Oscar de la Academia, fue un acontecimiento que dio nombre a una generación y marcó a toda una época. "Woodstock, 3 días de paz y música: el montaje del director" (Woodstock - 3 Days of Peace & Music: The Director's Cut) de 225 minutos de duración, cuenta con imágenes restauradas y con sonido digital. Además, ofrece 40 minutos adicionales de imágenes nunca vistas en la película inicial, que fueron integradas en el film por el propio director Michael Wadleigh. Un joven Martin Scorsese fue asistente del director y ayudó en el montaje de este aclamado e histórico documental. (FILMAFFINITY)
Avis de la communauté (3)
Absolutely outstanding, especially in its use of split-screen editing to cover contemporaneous events or to create immersive concert experiences. I thought it balanced concert footage with prep/audience/aftermath coverage really well, leaving me with a real feeling of knowing something about what it was like to be there. The performances were great overall, and some were just absolutely incendiary (the drum solo in Santana's "Soul Sacrifice" was my favorite, I think, but Joe Cocker also tore it up.) I've thought about this movie every day for a week and it's the rare example of a movie this long that I immediately wanted to watch again. What a remarkable work.
Riding coattails with a dozen camera-toting kids at the cultural event that would define a generation. During the build-up, Woodstock was expected to be a pretty big deal, but nobody dared imagine *how* big. At its peak, nearly half a million people gathered to share in this unique moment, abandoning their stalled cars, casting chain link fences aside and flooding the grounds in what would soon transition into a no-cost three-day event. All the while, cameras captured the arriving spectators’ buzzing enthusiasm, the organizers’ nervous spur-of-the-moment decision making and the artists’ drug-hazed, sleep-deprived performances. Those scraps and snippets are presented without commentary or narration; a breathing snapshot of the people and tunes that epitomized this long, spiritually-charged weekend. We don’t even get titles or introductions beyond the stage announcements; a blending of civilian chit-chat and celebrity sound byte that grants a certain degree of shared humility to all. You never know if that greasy, scrappy kid eyeballing the camera is going to grab a guitar and hop up on stage as a part of the next performance. We’ve barely finished listening to one such hazy-eyed youngster pontificate about his sex life when Jerry Garcia stops by to roll a joint and tune his guitar. The slice-of-life bits provide great context and essential breaks between songs, but music is the film’s main focus. Jimi Hendrix gets the heaviest play with five featured cuts, while most others are relegated to a single tune. Big names like CCR, The Band and The Grateful Dead don’t appear at all, by request, as they were unhappy with their performances. My personal standouts include Richie Havens, Joe Cocker, Sly and the Family Stone and Arlo Guthrie. Hendrix is such a virtuoso, he plays most of his set with eyes closed and mouth agape, lost in a sort of supernaturally orgasmic trance. The Who own the stage like a genuine big-league rock band, but represent a drastic departure from the more subdued, folksy flavor of preceding acts. Carlos Santana was allegedly so high on mescaline, he thought the neck of his guitar was a serpent. It was a pretty wild gig, but the caliber of music is all over the board. I hope to never hear another Sha-Na-Na song as long as I live. Getting through this documentary, especially the four-hour director’s cut, is a marathon. As was the festival itself, from all indications. Kudos to the fans for maintaining a friendly outlook through traffic jams, schedule delays and torrential downpours. And props to the film crew for not only enduring the same, but effectively capturing the event’s overwhelmingly positive, hopeful character.
Even tho this is almost 4 hours long!! It doesn't feel like that. It was good.