The Rolling Stones: Gimme Shelter with Albert Maysles: DVD Cover

    The Rolling Stones: Gimme Shelter Director: Albert Maysles, David Maysles, Charlotte Mitchell Zwerin

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    • DVD Release Date: 11/14/2000
    • Original Release: 1970
    • Rating: Rated PG
    • Sales Rank: 351

    Viewer Rating: (4 ratings)

    Detailed Rating: "Engaging" See All

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    • Overview
    • Editorial Reviews
    • Scenes
    • Customer Reviews
    • Cast & Crew
    • Full Product Details

    Scenes

    Features

    High-definition transfer of the uncensored 30th anniversary version, remastered and restored from the original; Dolby Digital and DTS 5.1 Surround Sound mixes; Never-before-seen Rolling Stones 1969 performance at Madison Square Garden, including "Little Queenie," "Oh Carol," and "Prodigal Son," plus backstage outtakes; Audio commentary by directors Albert Maysles and Charlotte Zwerin, and collaborator Stanley Goldstein; Excerpts from KSAN radio's Altamont wrap-up, recorded December 7, 1969, with new introductions by DJ Stefan Ponek; Alamont stills gallery, featuring the work of photographers Bill Owens and Beth Sunflower; "The Rolling Stones, Altamont, and Gimme Shelter": A 44-page booklet with essays by Jagger's former assistant Georgia Bergman, music writers Michael Lydon and Stanley Booth, ex-Oakland Hell's Angels chapter head Sonny Barger, and film critics Amy Taubin and Godfrey Cheshire; Original and re-release theatrical trailers, plus trailers for Maysles Films' classics Grey Gardens and Salesman; Filmographies for Maysles Films and Charlotte Zwerin; Restoration demonstration

    Full Product Details

    Scene Index

    Side #1
    0. Chapters
    1. Opening credits [1:09]
    2. "Welcome to the breakfast show" [4:20]
    3. "Well done, Sonny" [4:33]
    4. "(I Can't Get No) Satisfaction" [5:39]
    5. "Creating a microcosmic society" [3:32]
    6. "You Gotta Move" [1:31]
    7. "Wild Horses" [2:49]
    8. "Brown Sugar" [1:55]
    9. "Love in Vain" [4:29]
    10. "It's like the lemmings of the sea" [3:35]
    11. "I've Been Loving You Too Long" [3:27]
    12. "Honky Tonk Woman" [4:13]
    13. The show goes on [2:07]
    14. "Street Fighting Man" [:02]
    15. "They hit Mick" [3:41]
    16. "Let it happen" [1:25]
    17. The bummers begin [3:00]
    18. "The greatest party of 1969" [4:54]
    19. "The Other Side of This Life" [4:36]
    20. "It doesn't seem right" [6:02]
    21. "Sympathy for the Devil" [1:34]
    22. "Everybody's got to cool out" [1:36]
    23. "Why are we fighting?" [7:00]
    24. "Under My Thumb" [2:26]
    25. "He's gotta gun" [3:28]
    26. "Gimme Shelter" [4:53]
    27. End Credits [2:02]
    0. Index
    1. "more Than A Concert Film" [1:09]
    2. The Stones Want A Film [4:20]
    3. Capturing Their Reactions [4:33]
    4. "special Qualities" [5:39]
    5. Getting Releases [3:32]
    6. Sartorial Influences [1:31]
    7. "al Just Takes It!" [2:49]
    8. "could It Be Good Enough?" [1:55]
    9. "a Device To Get You Closer" [4:29]
    10. "a Lawyer Is Needed" [3:35]
    11. "remarkable Lady!" [3:27]
    12. Synching Film In 1969 [4:13]
    13. "the King Of The Torts" [2:07]
    14. Al's Camera [:02]
    15. "the Visual Turning Point" [3:41]
    16. Technical Difficulties [1:25]
    17. Editing Concerns [3:00]
    18. "something To Live Through" [4:54]
    19. Unofficial Honor Guard [4:36]
    20. The Dead Elect Not To Go On [6:02]
    21. "life Actors" [1:34]
    22. The Critics Respond [1:36]
    23. Distribution Problems [7:00]
    24. "the Angel Way" [2:26]
    25. "part Of The Film...inevitably" [3:28]
    26. Mick's Biggest Criticism [4:53]
    27. "the True Story The Woodstock Wasn't" [2:02]
    0. Index
    0. Local Color
    0. "the Hell With You, Brother"
    0. Kitty Genovese Stories
    0. The Allure Of Celebrity
    0. John Burkes, Rolling Stone Magazine
    0. "what About The Media?"
    0. Pete, San Francisco Hell's Angels
    0. Sam Cutler, Road Manager
    0. Sonny Barger, Oakland Hell's Angels
    0. Photographer Jim Marshall
    0. Emmett Grogan
    0. Wrap-up
    0. Bonus: The Rainbow Room

    Scene Index

    Editorial Reviews

    The rock movie's very own Zapruder film, Gimme Shelter stands today as a landmark portrait of a band and a generation that changed the stakes between the two camps forever. What starts as an electrifying document of the Rolling Stones' performances on their fiery 1969 American tour switches to an inquiry into the satanic Altamont concert where Hell's Angels -- hired by the group itself -- effectively stomped out the last shreds of '60s Utopia. Obviously, the Stones had no idea what was to happen at Altamont when they hired directors David Maysles, Albert Maysles, and Charlotte Zwerin. They simply didn't like how they looked a year earlier when Jean-Luc Godard showed them creating, and seemingly never finishing, "Sympathy for the Devil," in his lethargic, hypnotic same-titled film. The Maysleses and Zwerin fulfill their obligation to catch the fervor and brilliance of live Stones shows -- particularly in songs like "Honky Tonk Women" and "Street Fighting Man." They also, in the process, happen to catch a fan being stabbed in a crowd, footage that they then run past singer Mick Jagger. This snippet makes Gimme Shelter cut deeper than any rock documentary: Jagger's bitter expression as he shakes his head at his own arrogance and naivete is a remarkable moment. Bouncing between the band's debauched tour lifestyle (including a shaggy, funny session mixing "Wild Horses") and the fateful, ultraviolent California show, Gimme Shelter lets it all hang out. This 30th Anniversary DVD edition boasts a new, loud DTS version of the soundtrack, deleted scenes and radio excerpts from the live KSAN broadcast of the four-hour show, as well as a booklet of essays on both the tour and the cultural climate of the 1960s. This is a documentary and a document that is truly worthy of such elaborate treatment. Eddy Crouse, Barnes & Noble

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    Customer Reviews

    • Viewer Rating:
    • Ratings: 4Reviews: 2

    Who was behind the Hell's Angles and the others?by Anonymous

    Reader Rating:
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    November 29, 2004: If they couldn't break 'em one way they tried to break 'em another way.....

    Imagine what the flower generation could have turned out to be, had Altamont been planned better...by Anonymous

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    May 25, 2003: Yes, The Rolling Stones were a far-out band in the late 60's and early 70's, but I just can't bring myself to say it was their fault that the flower generation died. So what I'm gonna say is, that had the concert had been better planned, it actually could have become the most beautiful gathering of 1969, besides, oh what's that other festival that was so great...