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Last Waltz (Blu-ray)

It Started as a Concert. It Became a Celebration.


Features: Widescreen, Aspect Ratio 1.85:1, Dolby Digital (5.1), English, French, Spanish, Subtitled

Join an unparalleled lineup of rock superstars as they celebrate The Band's historic 1976 farewell performance. Directed by Martin Scorsese (Raging Bull, Goodfellas), The Last Waltz is not only "the most beautiful rock film ever made" (The New York Times), it's "one of the most important cultural events of the last two decades" (Rolling Stone)!

"...one of the best films ever made, period." Chuck Rudolph, Matinee Magazine
"...will make you want to sing and dance." Jeffrey M. Anderson, San Francisco Examiner
"An elegant toast to the glories of American rock 'n' roll." Los Angeles Times
"The finest of all rock movies!" NewsWeek
"Still matters and still moves..." Robert Wilonsky, New Times



Editor's Note

In what just might be the finest rock & roll concert film ever, THE LAST WALTZ celebrates the final performance by the Band (Robbie Robertson, Rick Danko, Richard Manuel, Levon Helm, and Garth Hudson). The show took place on Thanksgiving Day in 1976, at San Francisco's Winterland Arena--where the group had played their very first show more than 16 years before. In order to make their farewell even more unforgettable, they recruited numerous guests to join them onstage, including Bob Dylan, Neil Young, Joni Mitchell, Van Morrison, Eric Clapton, Muddy Waters, Ronnie Hawkins, Paul Butterfield, Emmylou Harris, Neil Diamond, the Staple Singers, Dr. John, Ringo Starr, Ron Wood, and Lawrence Ferlinghetti. Martin Scorsese, a former roommate of Robbie Robertson's, employs some of the world's greatest cinematographers--including Michael Chapman, Vilmos Zsigmond, and Laszlo Kovacs--to film the set in a way that captures the show's sweat and energy with a powerful intimacy. Interspersed into the songs are a series of interviews with the Band's members, who recall their early days playing for empty bars and their emergence as major players in the rock & roll game. THE LAST WALTZ is a thrilling concert film, mandatory viewing even for those unfamiliar with the Band or rock music in general.


Plot Summary

Martin Scorsese's stunning THE LAST WALTZ captures the Band's historic farewell performance in San Francisco on Thanksgiving Day, 1976, and features many revealing interviews with members of the legendary group. Among the many titles included are "The Weight," "The Night They Drove Old Dixie Down," "Helpless," and "I Shall be Released." Featuring some of rock & roll's most revered figures--including Bob Dylan, Neil Young, and Joni Mitchell--THE LAST WALTZ is unquestionably one of the greatest concert films ever.

Cast & Crew Bob Dylan - Featuring
Boris Leven - Production Designer
Emmylou Harris - Featuring
Eric Clapton - Featuring
Jan Roblee - Editor
Jonathan T. Taplin - Executive Producer
Joni Mitchell - Featuring
Martin Scorsese - Director
Michael Chapman - Cinematographer
Muddy Waters - Featuring
Neil Diamond - Featuring
Neil Young - Featuring
Paul Butterfield - Featuring
Ringo Starr - Featuring
Robbie Robertson - Producer
Ron Wood - Featuring
The Band - Featuring
Van Morrison - Featuring
Yeu-Bun Yee - Editor


Sony Pictures

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Review
Eye Weekly 10 of 10
Eye Weekly 10 of 10
The Last Waltz remains an unusually dignified portrait of rock excess. Since its release in 1978, Martin Scorsese's documentary of the Band's star-studded "farewell" show in 1976 -- it reformed in the '80s, minus guitarist Robbie Robertson -- has been widely imitated by other concert films. Yet its most striking quality is its sense of restraint. The manic editing of most rock movies since Woodstock is largely absent. Simply put, Scorsese knew that when he had one camera on Muddy Waters belting out "Mannish Boy," there was no point to cutting away to a shot of an usher just for the sake of variety...Intercut with the concert footage are interview segments in which the nervy Scorsese tries to pal around with the infinitely cooler Band members -- the director's awe for his friend Robertson, who later created soundtracks for The Color of Money and Casino, is still very amusing. - Jason Anderson

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Last Waltz (Blu-ray)