Woodstock | |
Director: | Michael Wadleigh |
Producer: | Bob Maurice[1] Dale Bell |
Editing: | Michael Wadleigh Martin Scorsese Stan Warnow Yeu-Bun Yee Jere Huggins Thelma Schoonmaker |
Distributor: | Warner Bros. |
Runtime: | 185 minutes (1970)[2] 224 minutes (1994)[3] |
Country: | United States |
Language: | English |
Budget: | $600,000 |
Gross: | $50 million[4] ($ million in dollars) |
Woodstock is a 1970 American documentary film of the watershed counterculture Woodstock Festival which took place in August 1969 near Bethel, New York.[5] [6]
The film was directed by Michael Wadleigh in his directional debut. Seven editors are credited, including Thelma Schoonmaker, Martin Scorsese, and Wadleigh. Woodstock was a great commercial and critical success. It received the Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. Schoonmaker was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Film Editing, a rare distinction for a documentary.[7] Dan Wallin and L. A. Johnson were nominated for the Academy Award for Best Sound.[8] [9] The film was screened at the 1970 Cannes Film Festival, but was not entered into the main competition.[10]
The 1970 theatrical release of the film ran 185 minutes. A director's cut spanning 224 minutes was released in 1994. Both cuts take liberties with the timeline of the festival. However, the opening and closing acts are the same in the film as they appeared on stage; Richie Havens opens the show and Jimi Hendrix closes it.
In 1996, the film was selected for preservation in the United States National Film Registry by the Library of Congress as being "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant".
An expanded 40th Anniversary Edition of Woodstock, released on June 9, 2009, in Blu-ray and DVD formats, features additional performances not before seen in the film, and it includes lengthened versions of existing performances, such as Creedence Clearwater Revival.[11]
No. | Group / Singers | Title | |
1.* | Crosby, Stills & Nash | "Long Time Gone" | |
2.* | Canned Heat | "Going Up the Country" | |
3.* | Crosby, Stills & Nash | "Wooden Ships" | |
4. | Richie Havens | "Handsome Johnny" | |
5. | "Freedom" / "Sometimes I Feel Like a Motherless Child" | ||
6. | Canned Heat | "A Change Is Gonna Come" ** | |
7. | Joan Baez | "Joe Hill" | |
8. | "Swing Low Sweet Chariot" | ||
9. | The Who | "We're Not Gonna Take It" / "See Me, Feel Me" | |
10. | "Summertime Blues" | ||
11. | Sha-Na-Na | "At the Hop" | |
12. | Joe Cocker and the Grease Band | "With a Little Help from My Friends" | |
13. | Audience | "Crowd Rain Chant" | |
14. | Country Joe and the Fish | "Rock and Soul Music" | |
15. | Arlo Guthrie | "Coming Into Los Angeles" | |
16. | Crosby, Stills & Nash | "" | |
17. | Ten Years After | "I'm Going Home" | |
18. | Jefferson Airplane | "Saturday Afternoon" / "Won't You Try" ** | |
19. | "Uncle Sam's Blues" ** | ||
20. | John Sebastian | "Younger Generation" | |
21. | Country Joe McDonald | "FISH Cheer / Feel-Like-I'm-Fixing-to-Die-Rag" | |
22. | Santana | "Soul Sacrifice" | |
23. | Sly and the Family Stone | "Dance to the Music" / "I Want to Take You Higher" | |
24. | Janis Joplin | "Work Me, Lord" ** | |
25. | Jimi Hendrix | "Voodoo Child (Slight Return)" (named "Voodoo Chile" in the film) ** | |
26. | "The Star-Spangled Banner" | ||
27. | "Purple Haze" | ||
28. | "Woodstock Improvisation" ** | ||
29. | "Villanova Junction" | ||
30. | Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young | "Woodstock"* / "Find the Cost of Freedom" ** |
The film opened at 7 theaters in the United States and Canada on March 26, 1970 (Boston, Coral Gables, Dallas, Los Angeles, New York, Toronto and Washington D.C.) and set opening day house records in each one with grosses totalling $41,633. It opened at a further theater in New York City on April 1.[12]
Woodstock received universal acclaim from newspaper and magazine critics in 1970. It was also an enormous box-office smash. The edition of May 20, 1970 of Variety reported it was doing well in its third week in Chicago and San Francisco.[13] In each of those metropolitan areas the movie played at only one cinema during that week, but many thousands showed up.[13] Eventually, after it branched out to more cinemas including more than one per metropolitan area, it grossed $50 million in the United States. The budget for its production was just $600,000,[4] making it not only the fifth highest-grossing film of 1970 but one of the most profitable movies of that year as well.
Decades after its initial release, the film earned a rare 100% "Fresh" rating on Rotten Tomatoes, based on 25 reviews, with a weighted average of 8.58/10. The critical consensus reads: "By documenting arguably the most renowned music festival in history, Woodstock: 3 Days of Peace & Music achieves the rare feat of capturing the unique spirit of its time."[14]
In his original 1970 review, Roger Ebert rated the movie 4 stars (out of 4) and described it as "maybe the best documentary ever made in America", adding "The remarkable thing about Wadleigh's film is that it succeeds so completely in making us feel how it must have been to be there".[15] In 2005 Ebert added Woodstock to his "Great Movies" list and wrote a retrospective review that stated, "Woodstock is a beautiful, moving, ultimately great film...Now that the period is described as a far-ago time like "the 1920s" or "the 1930s," how touching it is in this film to see the full flower of its moment, of its youth and hope."[16]
In 1996, Woodstock was selected for preservation in the United States National Film Registry by the Library of Congress as being "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant".
In the science fiction thriller The Omega Man (1971), Colonel Robert Neville (played by Charlton Heston) is seen traveling to a movie theatre in Los Angeles to screen the film for himself alone. Woodstock had been a recent film debuting prior to release of The Omega Man, and had been held over (continuously run) in some theaters for months. Neville darkly remarks the film is so popular it was "held over for the third straight year". As he repeats some of the dialogue verbatim, it is clear that Neville has repeated the ritual many times during the two years that he has believed himself to be the last man alive on Earth.[17] [18]
In a 2009 review, Noel Murray of The A.V. Club graded the DVD release A−, stating "Wadleigh crafted a film with a thoughtful flow; it tells the full story of the event, from the paranoia (and eventual acceptance) of the locals to the helpful attitudes (and eventual paranoia) of the throng. Woodstock runs for more than 20 minutes before Wadleigh even gets to any of the performances, and throughout the film, he cuts away to interviews and montages that map out the scope of the mini-community formed at Woodstock, in all its glories and sadness."[19] Entertainment Weekly called this film the benchmark of concert movies and one of the most entertaining documentaries ever made.[20]
Upon the festival's 25th anniversary, in 1994, a 224 minutes director's cut of the film — subtitled 3 Days of Peace & Music — was released theatrically in cinemas and later on DVD. It added over 40 minutes and included additional performances by Canned Heat, Jefferson Airplane and Janis Joplin. Jimi Hendrix's set at the end of the film was also extended with two additional numbers.
After the closing credits — featuring Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young's "Find the Cost of Freedom"[21] — a list of prominent people from the "Woodstock Generation" who had died is shown, including John F. Kennedy, Malcolm X, Che Guevara, Martin Luther King Jr., Mama Cass Elliot, Jim Morrison, John Lennon, Max Yasgur, Roy Orbison, Abbie Hoffman, Paul Butterfield, Keith Moon, Bob Hite, Richard Manuel, Janis Joplin and Jimi Hendrix. It ends with the epitaph to the right:
On June 9, 2009, a 40th-anniversary edition was released in two-disc sets on Blu-ray and DVD, available as both a "Special Edition" and an "Ultimate Collector's Edition". The latter included copious memorabilia. The director's cut was newly remastered in high definition with a 2K scan of the original elements, and provided a new 5.1 audio mix. Among the special features are 18 never-before-seen performances from artists such as Joan Baez, Country Joe McDonald, Santana, The Who, Jefferson Airplane, Canned Heat and Joe Cocker; five of the artists included—Paul Butterfield, Creedence Clearwater Revival, The Grateful Dead, Johnny Winter and Mountain—played at Woodstock but had never appeared in any film version.[22]
The bonus songs, a 143-minute collection of 18 performances presented in standard definition, are entitled "Untold Stories":
The bonus featurettes, also in standard definition, last 77 minutes. Titled "Woodstock: From Festival to Feature," they cover the festival, the challenges of making the film, its reception and legacy, and other topics:
This edition contains the same Blu-ray version of the film released in 2009 along with the second Blu-ray disc of bonus features, but the latter are now presented in high definition.[23] The set also adds a third Blu-ray disc with sixteen more previously unreleased performances and eight more featurettes.[22]
The 16 performances, which total 73 minutes, are titled "Untold Stories Revisited":
The eight featurettes are titled "Woodstock: From Festival to Feature Revisited." They run a total of 32 minutes and cover the festival behind the scenes, its history and legacy, and the restoration of the film: