| Sympathy for the Devil | 
| Director: Jean-luc Godard Actors: Mick Jagger, Keith Richards (ii), Brian Jones, Bill Wyman, Charlie Watts Studio: Abkco Category: DVD
List Price: $19.98 Buy New: $13.99 You Save: $5.99 (30%)
Buy New/Used/Collectible from $10.75
Avg. Customer Rating:   (41 reviews) Sales Rank: 21900
Format: Color, Dvd-video, Ntsc Language: English (Original Language) Rating: NR (Not Rated) Media: DVD Running Time: 101 minutes Number Of Items: 1 Aspect Ratio: 1.78:1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.3 Dimensions (in): 7.5 x 5.1 x 0.6
MPN: 10059 UPC: 037871100591 EAN: 0037871100591 ASIN: B0000DC13U
Release Date: October 21, 2003 Theatrical Release Date: April 26, 1970 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
|
| Similar Items:
|
| Editorial Reviews:
Amazon.com This version of Jean-Luc Godard's 1968 One Plus One caused a legendary confrontation at a film festival when the director became infuriated at his producer's decision to attach the Rolling Stones' completed song "Sympathy for the Devil" at the film's end. Godard's own original plan had been to make a film of the Stones' construction of the tune in rehearsal, and intercut that with a story line about a white revolutionary who becomes suicidal when her lover embraces black separatism. Production problems caused Godard to give up that idea and just allow scenes to fall where they would, allowing viewers to construct the film in their own minds. Be that as it may, this slightly shorter and more commercial producer's cut does not lack in satisfaction by closing things out with the song as Stones fans know it. Overall, the film is a bewildering affair, and that's not at all a bad thing: one's orientation is whatever one makes of Godard's enthralling mess here. Even if a viewer is just interested in seeing the Stones at their peak and at work on their brilliant 1968 album Beggars Banquet, this is a highly rewarding experience. Astute watchers and listeners will note that in an early take of the song, Mick Jagger sings the lyric, "I shouted out, 'Who killed Kennedy?'/When after all, it was you and me." Later, with no mention of a particularly tragic 1968 event in American politics, Jagger has revised the line to "I shouted out, 'Who killed the Kennedys?'" Talk about a startling moment. --Tom Keogh
|
| Customer Reviews: Read 36 more reviews...
  Driving Fast in the Fog October 29, 2008
Sympathy for the Devil (originally titled One Plus One) was shot in 1968, when Godard's infatuation with Maoist ideology was at fever pitch. In the films he churned out from 67 to 74 (approximately 18 films, some of which were never released) Godard was struggling to find sounds and visuals that would convey the reality of revolutionary change. One Plus One works better than most because its central image - a rock band struggling to make a great song - is an inspired metaphor for the turbulent, tedious and confounding process of making a social revolution.
Over half the movie is a straightforward documentary of the Rolling Stones working on Sympathy for the Devil, a song from their Beggar's Banquet album. The deadpan camera captures unglamorous, blue-collar songmaking, filled with dead ends and the odd moment of serendipity. We see the cohesiveness of the band (except for Brian Jones, pathetically boxed off in the studio, out of tune and out of touch. He drowned shortly afterwards.) and the hard work behind their genius. The recording sessions are interspersed with revolutionary agitprop - gun toting black revolutionaries in an auto junkyard; communist manifestos being read in a newsagent's shop filled with girlie magazines. The final element is a moderately amusing voice over prose piece that puts world leaders such as Leonid Brezhnev and John Foster Dulles in compromising sexual situations.
The message here is that making something new is messy, solipsistic, self-indulgent and occasionally sublime. In keeping with Godard's idea of revolution as ongoing and unfinished, the director's cut of the movie never included the finished version of the Stones song. The producer added it later, at the end, over some slapped in color-tinted still frames, earning him a well-deserved punch in the nose from Godard. (The version reviewed here, with the Sympathy for the Devil title, is the producer's version.)
Even while drunk on revolutionary idealism, Godard couldn't stop being a talented and provocative filmmaker. One Plus One is a successful if occasionally tedious film in its own right. It's also an interesting period piece, bringing us back to a time when artists, activists and your average hippie all felt they had to do what they were doing in order to get where they were going next, a time when all of it felt dreadfully important, even when it wasn't.
  I found this film fascinating, despite its reputation.... July 19, 2008 3 out of 3 found this review helpful
This film has been unfairly maligned by many (Rolling Stones fans, Godard fans), but it's actually pretty good and absolutely fascinating at times. Godard's politics get in the way of his cinematic mastery at times, but overall I found this as good and as compulsively watchable as his classic films. One of the greatest things about this film (as others have noted here) is showing The Rolling Stones in their rawest state. This isn't a slick, MTV, reality style TV programme with lame interviews and an obsession with showing only the "fun times" while working. Godard shows (with his camera circling the studio in brilliantly filmed long takes) how absolutely TEDIOUS it is to make a record/CD/music. We see Jagger, Richards, Wyman, Watts (and studio musicians) obsess over the most minute details on how the song Sympathy for the Devil is going to sound. It's not like "hey, let's do the song", and one take later, they're done. There aren't any groupies, flashing lights, nothing. It's just The Stones making their music, and it shows the dedication that great musicians like The Rolling Stones put into their craft. It's also especially sad to see Brian Jones, who was pretty much "gone" at the time of this film. The Stones put him off in a corner (he looks like he's sitting in his own little box), and you can hear him strumming inaudibly. There's a microphone in front of him, but it obviously isn't on, and Jones doesn't seem to know. Jagger, Wyman, Richards, and Watts pretty much ignore him, and soldier on without him. Jones's drug use and alienation were at its zenith here, and he died shortly after these sessions. These sequences might be the most realistic depiction of rock musicians recording an album ever.
Godard intercuts a lot of political material in the film (this film was made during his generally abysmal "Maoist" period), but his framing (especially scenes shot at a junkyard) is classic Godard. Even though these scenes in the junkyard are with the Black Panthers and their rhetoric/dialogue are completely dated, dogmatic, and overly political, the scenes are still well shot and crafted. I never found the film boring, unlike some of Godard's other Maoist films like La Chinoise, which was REALLY boring. So if you're a Godard fan, or a Stones fan, you should see this film. It's really quite good, despite some of its politics.
  ***pathetic (NO sympathy!) January 11, 2008 2 out of 3 found this review helpful
Great song; ridiculous movie. I'm of this silly generation, yet it is not the silliness of half this movie which bothers me. (The movie mixes footage of the Rolling Stones recording "Sympathy For the Devil" with immature, amateur social "commentary".) It is the arrogance and the ignorance which flows from this film that bothers me, the fakery that richness and idleness birth. Silly me! When I was impressionable, I listened to these jesters and these jumping jack flashes rather than the wisdom of the west. Maybe this is why so many had so many objections to us in the 1970s; we were so objectionable. Continue to listen to the song. Save yourself, though, from this dull, pornographic drivel. (Unless, of course, you want to see just how ugly and empty we were then.)
  Caveat Emptor August 27, 2007 2 out of 4 found this review helpful
I must have had this movie in my hands a few dozen times before I finally picked it up in a hasty moment recently. The reviews herein hit the nail pretty squarely and if you are wondering about it, please take note: THIS IS NOT A DOCUMENTARY ABOUT THE STONES. I know nothing of Jean-Luc Godard's work and have no desire to if this is indicative of his style. That's not a knock on him at all, just a definition of my own taste. That said, the Stones footage is priceless, especially is you are intrigued by what some might consider the mundane nature of composing a song. Keith has often confessed that the best songwriting of the band comes from what he calls a "marination" process and that is an apt description of how Sympathy for the Devil is created in the footage from the studio we are treated to. The film captures this fascinating process as the song progresses and transforms. Highlights along the way are Keith's seemingly off-the-cuff riffing that mirror the final stinging solo of the recording, the keyboard morphing from organ to the more classic piano, and the percussion component ending with the now classic work from Rocky Dijon. It was like being a fly on the wall and proved mesmerizing to me. However, if you are inpatient with the interwoven parts of the film that the back cover calls "political cartoons" and find it too tedious to sift through, I would strongly advise renting before owning. Interestingly enough, I found Gimme Shelter far more frustrating because much of the Stones footage in that movie was focused on Jagger exclusively. In this movie, we are treated to a broad canvas and get to see everyone, including Brian Jones, contributing. Many slag off his part in the process, but I think he was doing his best and was not nearly as "out of it" as many reviewers have stated. Five stars for the Stones, minus two for the rest, that's the final rating of three.
  3 and 1/2 stars : a little misunderstanding about this film must be pointed out September 12, 2006 1 out of 2 found this review helpful
i don't think this movie is an absolute masterpiece (and sure, there is better films of Godard than this one) but it contains some interesting moments and situations like a lot of Godard's films ; Godard is not the strongest director for telling a linear narrative tale but in his film the situations, the originality of the scenes are predominant without expecting that the man will tell a common story with a beginning, a middle and an end ; however, he is a good director. Secondly, in my opinion this is an error to watch this film with the idea that the film is a movie about the Stones (maybe this is partly due to the fault of the american title, referring to the famous song of the band, the french title is 'One + One'), this is above all a Godard's film and the director uses the Stones as a tool, a chapter in his film and not with the intention of filming uniquely this band ; so my advice for the fans of the Rolling Stones is to search elsewhere and buy some Stones' live stuff (i suppose there is plenty of that on the market) instead of watching a Godard's film with the purpose to watch a Stones' one.
|
|
|