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Sympathy for the Devil

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Sympathy for the Devil (1969)

April. 22,1969
|
6.2
|
NR
| Documentary Music
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An exhilarating, provocative motion picture. The Rolling Stones rehearse their latest song, "Sympathy For the Devil," in a London studio. Beginning as a ballad, the track gradually acquires a pulsating groove, which gets Jagger into a rousing vocal display of soulful emotion that Godard captures on film.

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Reviews

Solemplex
1969/04/22

To me, this movie is perfection.

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Claysaba
1969/04/23

Excellent, Without a doubt!!

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Beanbioca
1969/04/24

As Good As It Gets

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Allison Davies
1969/04/25

The film never slows down or bores, plunging from one harrowing sequence to the next.

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gavin6942
1969/04/26

Godard's documentation of late 1960s Western counter-culture, examining the Black Panthers, referring to works by LeRoi Jones and Eldridge Cleaver. Other notable subjects are the role of news media, the mediated image, a growing technocratic society, women's liberation, the May revolt in France and the power of language.I can't say I'm a huge Godard fan, but this film has to be one of his best pieces. 1968 is arguably the most revolutionary year of the most revolutionary decade of the 1900s. And he captured it, through the changes in the Stones, the Black Panthers, and more. Although not quite a documentary, it isn't quite fiction, either... it's a nice blend of art and a time capsule for when change -- good or bad -- was in the air.

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thos173
1969/04/27

Don't expect this film to reveal its charms on first viewing. It is akin to a difficult piece of classical music. The first view is strictly baffling. The juxtaposition of elements is absurd, the characterisations fantastical. It marches on. You don't know where it is going. To Godard's chagrin no doubt, he creates beautiful scenes, amongst them Anne Wiazemsky's disappearance into the green wood. He provides an uninterrupted view. Historically fascinating - London with its rough edges. And the Stones at work and play with Nicky Hopkins pulling it together on the keyboards. A must see for Stonesologists and rock specialists. Political fire in the belly. Not time wasted. A sharpening experience.

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Michael_Elliott
1969/04/28

Sympathy for the Devil (1968) BOMB (out of 4) Jean-Luc Godard's "documentary" shows The Rolling Stones recording the title track while mixing in footage of the Black Panthers preaching hatred. This is without question one of the worst documentaries I've ever seen and it's the worth Godard film I've seen to date but it's rather amazing how incredibly stupid this legendary director can be at times. The title is going to attract mainly fans of The Rolling Stones but their footage isn't here for fans and I'm still trying to think of why Godard put the footage here. Apparently he's director's cut run eleven minutes longer and features more of the Black Panthers and it's clear that he wanted the spotlight on hate instead of the band so why include the band at all? There's one scene where a couple Black Panthers tell a story of how they want to kill white women and Godard follows this up with a short film of black men gunning down white women. There's non-stop hatred talk coming from this group so I'm really shocked there's not more controversy surrounding this film. There are various short films throughout the movie and there's all sorts of stuff acted out, which makes no sense when put together and you also get constant scenes of men spray painting cars. The Stones footage shows them recording the classic song from the early stages to its complete version but with all the other crap in this film I can't even recommend this to fans of the group.

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MARIO GAUCI
1969/04/29

This "meeting" of two of the finest artists of the 20th Century - Jean-Luc Godard and The Rolling Stones - is truly a missed opportunity. The footage of the band recording their landmark song (probably my favorite Stones track) is certainly fascinating, as we watch the initially slow musical accompaniment for the song taking shape and metamorphose into the energetic, percussion-heavy final version we're familiar with. Sadly, it's also quite apparent here that Brian Jones (who sits in his booth playing his acoustic guitar, rarely communicating with his bandmates except to ask for a cigarette and eventually disappearing altogether in the second half of the film) was slipping away fast.Unfortunately for us viewers, Godard (in full-blown "political activist" mode) unwisely intersperses the recording sessions with lots of boring stuff featuring militant black people spouting "Black Power" philosophy in a junkyard, white political activists reading their "sacred" texts in a book shop while members of the general public are made to slap two of their comrades and give the Nazi salute and, most embarrassingly of all perhaps, Godard's current wife, Anne Wiazemsky (playing Eve Democracy!) is seen being followed by a camera crew in a field and asked the most obtuse "topical" questions imaginable to which she merely answers in the affirmative or the negative! As if this wasn't enough, the film has undoubtedly the murkiest soundtrack I've ever had the misfortune to hear (so that I often had to rely on the forced Italian subtitles present on the VHS copy I was watching) and I'd bet that even Robert Altman would have objected to Godard's occasional overlapping on the soundtrack of the Stones recording, the Black Power spoutings, an anonymous narrator reading a (mercifully) hilarious pulp novel, etc. For some inexplicable reason then, the film ends on a beach where an unidentified film crew is filming a battle sequence!! Godard's original intention was to not include the song "Sympathy For The Devil" in its entirety and when producer Iain Quarrier overruled him, he jumped up on London's National Film Theater stage following a screening of the film and knocked him out! Godard's version, entitled ONE PLUS ONE, is also available on a double-feature R2 DVD including both cuts of the film but it's highly unlikely that I'll be bothering with it any time soon...

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