Stop Making Sense with Bernie Worrel: DVD Cover

    Stop Making Sense Director: Jonathan Demme Cast: Bernie Worrel, Alex Weir, Steve Scales

    DVD - Wide Screen / Dolby 5.1 / Stereo Learn more

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    • DVD Release Date: 10/26/1999
    • Original Release: 1984
    • Rating: Not Rated
    • Sales Rank: 5,691

    Viewer Rating: (6 ratings)

    Detailed Rating: "Storytelling" See All

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    Blu-ray - Wide Screen$27.99
     
    • Overview
    • Editorial Reviews
    • Scenes
    • Customer Reviews
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    Features

    Digitally re-mixed and re-mastered; Three audio mixes: Dolby Digital 5.1 feature film, 5.1 studio mix, and 2.0 stereo; Widescreen 16:9 anamorphic; Bonus tracks: "Cities," "Big Business"/"I Zimbra"; Audio commentary by all four band members and director Jonathan Demme; Storyboard-to-film comparison, original promotional trailer, "David Byrne Interviews....David Byrne" promotional clip; Full-motion menu

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    Scene Index

    Side #1 --
    0. Song Selection
    1. Psycho Killer [6:30]
    2. Heaven [3:58]
    3. Thank You for Sending Me an Angel [2:27]
    4. Found a Job [3:28]
    5. Slippery People [4:40]
    6. Burning Down the House [4:20]
    7. Life During Wartime [5:48]
    8. Making Flippy Floppy [5:45]
    9. Swamp [4:35]
    10. What a Day That Was [6:33]
    11. Naive Melody (This Must Be the Place) [5:26]
    12. Once in a Lifetime [5:40]
    13. Genius of Love [5:14]
    14. Girlfriend Is Better [5:14]
    15. Take Me to the River [8:02]
    16. Cross-Eyed and Painless [10:55]

    Scene Index

    Editorial Reviews

    David Byrne, a wiry paradigm of twitchy hipsterism, takes center stage in Stop Making Sense, the celebrated concert film directed by Jonathan Demme that became, in effect, Talking Heads' Last Waltz. Conceived for the stage by Byrne, Stop Making Sense eschews the backstage cliché and concentrates instead on the music and performances, which are precise and energetic, and Byrne's uniquely low-key kinetics, which pretty much rivet the viewer from start to finish. Byrne and the band have minimal interaction with their audience, which is mixed down to a distant cheering throng on the soundtrack. There is no banter between songs, and no cutaways to shots of the appreciative crowd. Byrne's personality never emerges from behind his stylized stage persona, a straight white man driven to sudden flights of loose-limbed rapture by the music. The lighting effects are simple but effective -- including the silhouetting of Byrne in his "Big Suit"-- as are the occasional rear projections, which support the musicians without overwhelming them. And the music is effectively Talking Heads' greatest hits, kicking off with Byrne's acoustic solo rendition of "Psycho Killer" (accompanied by a boom-box rhythm track) and moving inexorably through favorites like "Slippery People," "Burning Down the House," and "Once in a Lifetime." There's no nonsense in Stop Making Sense, a superb piece of work that documents the musical intensity and unique style of the Talking Heads for the ages. The DVD includes custom audio settings, commentary by Byrne, Chris Franz, Tina Weymouth, Jerry Harrison, and Demme, three songs not included in the film -- and a fittingly oddball self-interview with Byrne. Gregory Baird, Barnes & Noble

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    Customer Reviews

    One of only a handfull of Concert films that can be called Classicby JohnQ

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    July 31, 2009: This is a Great concert film, created expressly for film, and is a joyous experience throughout. If you need a movie to help you do your daily workouts, this is the one to get. You can get exhausted just watching these guys running around the stage, and they all seem to be having a terrific time doing it as well. Highly recommended. This film does such a good job of presenting the Talking Heads best songs that the only CD I have from them is the post-movie "Little Creatures" CD.

    I Also Recommend: Little Creatures.

    More than a concert, a lesson in how to make the perfect concert film!by Anonymous

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    March 11, 2004: If you loved it in the theater then this DVD will blow you away!! The 5.1 surround sound, the clairity of the picture, AND all the extras. I watched it in the original form, then started it over with the 'commentery' audio turned on, and it's a whole new movie. Just think... you get to listen while the band talks through all the deatils and stories about the making of (not only) the movie, but the songs, the ideas that made the band and the way the whole show and tour looked. WOW!!


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