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Gimme Shelter

1970 - Rated PG (MPAA)
Release Date: 11/14/2000
Features: DVD Features: Region 1 Keep Case Full Frame - 1.33 Audio: Dolby Digital 2.0 - English Dolby Digital 5.1 - English Dolby Digital DTS - English Additional Release Material: Audio Commentary: Albert Maysles - Director, Charlotte Zwerin - Director, Stanley Goldstein - Collaborator Bonus Footage: Censored Footage Additional Audio Material: Excerpts from KSAN radio's post-Altamont broadcast with introduction by DJ Stefan Ponek Documentary: Restoration Demonstration Outtakes: 1. Backstage Outtakes 2. Deleted Scenes (Songs) - "Little Queenie," "Oh Carol," and "Prodigal Son" Trailers: 1. Original Theatrical Trailer 2. Bonus Original Theatrical Trailer - GREY GARDENS 3. Bonus Original Theatrical Trailer - SALESMAN 4. Bonus Original Theatrical Trailer - GIMME SHELTER (re-release) Text/Photo Galleries: Stills/Photos: Altamont Stills (featuring photographs by Bill Owens and Beth Sunflower) Filmographies: 1. Albert Maysles - Director 2. David Maysles - Director 3. Charlotte Zwerin - Director Additional Products: Booklet - "The Rolling Stones, Altamont, and Gimme Shelter" (44 pages)
Time:  91  mins.
J&R Item # 1008326_8
UPC # 037429154526
Label: Criterion Collection
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Criterion Collection DVD
 
1970 - Not Rated
Release Date: 12/01/2009
Features: Blu-ray Disc Features: Region [unknown] Full Frame - 1.33 Audio: Dolby Digital 2.0 Stereo - English DTS HD Master Audio - English
Original Language:  N/A
Time:  91  mins.
J&R Item # 1008326_10
UPC # 715515051514
Label: Criterion Collection
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Criterion Collection Blu-ray Disc
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Plot Credits Reviews Related Shipping
This documentary of the Rolling Stones' 1969 US tour has become a legendary, harrowing symbol of the tragic demise of the "Peace and Love" era. After a successful tour across the United States, the Rolling Stones gave a free December concert at Altamont Speedway in California with the Grateful Dead (not seen performing), Ike and Tina Turner, Jefferson Airplane, and the Flying Burrito Brothers (all seen performing one song each). The poorly planned show was fraught with problems from its inception. The band unwisely selected the Hells Angels motorcycle club to provide security, and after the pre-existing chaos was fueled by very visible alcohol and drug abuse, the bikers resorted to violence to keep the stoned, restless, and often naked crowd in line. The result: dozens of injuries and the on-screen stabbing of a young African-American man (during "Sympathy for the Devil," no less) by one of the concert's "staff security." In a manipulative but effective move, the Maysles brothers and Charlotte Zwerin filmed Mick Jagger in the editing room witnessing the on-camera murder for the first time. But aside from that unexpected drama, the film also works as a rock-and-roll document, capturing the band at their most relaxed, intoxicating, and electrifying.

"...Mesmerizing....The only rock-and-roll film that exerts the saturnine intensity of a thriller..." -- Rating: A -- Owen Gleiberman , (Entertainment Weekly)

"...Framed with photographic precision in an all-out combat zone, this is a landmark documentary..." -- 4 out of 4 stars -- Mike Clark , (USA Today)

"...A genuinely scary affair, a slow-motion depiction of a cultural car crash, which turned the dewy-eyed optimism of Woodstock on its head..." -- Mark Kermode , (Sight and Sound)

"...A gripping chronicle of the Stones at their height..." -- Rolling Stone Staff , (Rolling Stone)

5 stars out of 5 -- "In its unwilted capacity to shock and palpable sense of a culture shifting, SHELTER gives potent testimony to tragedy." -- Kevin Harley , (Total Film)

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