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Shine a Light
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Shine a Light (2008)

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User Rating: 7.6/10 (1,855 votes)
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Overview

Director:
Martin Scorsese
Release Date:
4 April 2008 (Brazil) more view trailer
Plot:
A career-spanning documentary on the Rolling Stones, with concert footage from their "A Bigger Bang" tour. full summary | full synopsis (warning! may contain spoilers)
NewsDesk:
(21 articles)
'Satc' topples 'Indiana' in Aussie chart (From digitalspy. 13 June 2008, 1:30 AM, PDT)
'Indiana' retains Aussie top spot (From digitalspy. 4 June 2008, 4:48 AM, PDT)
User Comments:
aka: 'Some Country for Old Men' more

Cast

 (Cast overview, first billed only)

Mick Jagger ... Himself (also archive footage)
Keith Richards ... Himself (also archive footage)
Charlie Watts ... Himself (also archive footage)
Ron Wood ... Himself (as Ronnie Wood)

Christina Aguilera ... Herself
Buddy Guy ... Himself
Jack White ... Himself (as Jack White III)
Darryl Jones ... Himself
Lisa Fischer ... Herself
Bernard Fowler ... Himself
Blondie Chaplin ... Himself
Chuck Leavell ... Himself
Bobby Keys ... Himself
Tim Ries ... Himself

Martin Scorsese ... Himself
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Additional Details

Also Known As:
Shine a Light (USA) (working title)
Shine a Light: The IMAX Experience (USA) (IMAX version)
Untitled Rolling Stones Documentary (USA) (working title)
Untitled Stones/Scorsese Film (USA) (working title)
more
MPAA:
Rated PG-13 for brief strong language, drug references and smoking. (edited for re-rating; originally rated R for some language)
Runtime:
Argentina:122 min | USA:122 min
Country:
USA | UK
Language:
English
Aspect Ratio:
1.85 : 1 more
Sound Mix:
SDDS | Sonics-DDP (IMAX version) | Dolby Digital | DTS
MOVIEmeter: ?
^ 80% since last week why?

Fun Stuff

Trivia:
Bruce Willis can be seen in the audience wearing a yellow hat. more
Quotes:
Mick Jagger: Well we've been doing this music thing for two years now and we never thought we would last this long, but I can see us doing it for maybe another year. more
Movie Connections:
Featured in "Siskel & Ebert & the Movies: (2008-04-05)" (2008) more

FAQ

This FAQ is empty. Add the first question.
15 out of 19 people found the following comment useful:-
aka: 'Some Country for Old Men', 4 April 2008
10/10
Author: Filmjack3 from United States

Shine a Light displays, thrillingly and with the bombastic POP of a revisited 'happy place', why many love the Rolling Stones and many love the style of Martin Scorsese. It's mostly a concert movie shot over a period of two mights at the Beacon theater (as if doing a workhorse revival of thirty years ago, while Scorsese was busy shooting New York, New York in 76 and doing the Last Waltz concurrently, this time he shot the concert while finishing up the Departed), with some choice documentary footage interspersed in between some songs. On both fronts, however minor the (all archival) interview footage is, it's a big success, visually and musically, as good old rock and roll performance art (well, almost art, but I like it), and as visual virtuosity made incarnate.

It might be easy to adulate the Stones, as well as Scorsese. They've been around for so long, doing what they do, with each side rumored here and there to quit doing what they do (for the Stones it's every tour, much to their grinning bemusement, and for Scorsese it was a point in the 80s when he thought he'd have to leave Hollywood and make documentaries on saints). They're always acclaimed, usually big money-makers, and they've acquired a kind of nether-region between 'cult' audience and full-blown mainstream mayhem. It's this that is, in a way, the subtext for Shine a Light. While Scorsese stays mostly behind the scenes, the Stones are up and front and in center of a marvelous performance, and showcasing the energy and level of pizazz that quiets the naysayers. They sold out, and it doesn't get to them a single bit.

After some funny early footage of Scorsese (shot usually in black and white DV by Albert Maysles, who also appears here and there) getting into a minor tizzy about what the set-list is going to be, and getting some downtime with Bill Clinton, the show starts up like any good Stones show should- Jumpin' Jack Flash. Then onward come some given numbers (Shattered, Brown Sugar, Tumbling Dice), the masterpieces (Sympathy for the Devil, Loving Cup, featuring an awesome Jack White, and Champagne and Reefer with an equally awesome Buddy Guy), and a lot of unexpected tracks too (Live with Me with showy Aguilera, As Tears go By, some country song, and a kick-ass She Was Hot). For fans it's an amazing mix, and it allows for those who are just casual admirers to get their money's worth, primarily in IMAX. This is not just because of the quality of the music and the performances- which is, at its best, revelatory of what this band can do, at any age- but because of Scorsese's cameras, moving around in epic and roving fashion, edited with efficiency to not go all over the place or too slow, and, chiefly, to make it intimate like how many remember the Last Waltz to be (lots of neatly defined close-ups, lingering on to capture these hardened rockers).

And at the end, what is the point? Is it just another blah-blah Stones concert movie? Not necessarily. It doesn't have the heavy sociological context of Gimme Shelter, however it's not a little sloppy like Let's Spend the Night Together. Shine a Light celebrates its heroes, but it doesn't go completely overboard. Scorsese knows, as he did with Bob Dylan, not to get too cocky with these fogies. It's important to throw in those bits with the Stones getting interviewed, candid and without much overbearing ego present, and by the end you know there's still a place for them, firmly, in the public consciousness. They sold out in the most ironically good way in rock music history, with Scorsese now wonderfully in tow. A+

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The only thing bad about this.... ivonnec88
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