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IMDbPro

Rolling Stones: Shine a Light

Título original: Shine a Light
  • 2008
  • B
  • 2h 2min
CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
7.1/10
13 k
TU CALIFICACIÓN
Mick Jagger, Keith Richards, Charlie Watts, and Ronnie Wood in Rolling Stones: Shine a Light (2008)
Shine a Light - Trailer
Reproducir trailer2:30
11 videos
55 fotos
BiografíaDocumentalDocumental musicalMúsica

La carrera de los Rolling Stones, con imágenes de conciertos de su gira "A Bigger Bang".La carrera de los Rolling Stones, con imágenes de conciertos de su gira "A Bigger Bang".La carrera de los Rolling Stones, con imágenes de conciertos de su gira "A Bigger Bang".

  • Dirección
    • Martin Scorsese
  • Elenco
    • Mick Jagger
    • Keith Richards
    • Charlie Watts
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
  • CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
    7.1/10
    13 k
    TU CALIFICACIÓN
    • Dirección
      • Martin Scorsese
    • Elenco
      • Mick Jagger
      • Keith Richards
      • Charlie Watts
    • 76Opiniones de los usuarios
    • 129Opiniones de los críticos
    • 76Metascore
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
    • Premios
      • 4 nominaciones en total

    Videos11

    Shine a Light - Trailer
    Trailer 2:30
    Shine a Light - Trailer
    Shine A Light
    Clip 0:49
    Shine A Light
    Shine A Light
    Clip 0:49
    Shine A Light
    Shine A Light
    Clip 0:28
    Shine A Light
    Shine A Light
    Clip 0:58
    Shine A Light
    Shine A Light
    Clip 0:57
    Shine A Light
    Shine A Light
    Clip 1:00
    Shine A Light

    Fotos55

    Ver el cartel
    Ver el cartel
    Ver el cartel
    Ver el cartel
    Ver el cartel
    Ver el cartel
    + 49
    Ver el cartel

    Elenco principal41

    Editar
    Mick Jagger
    Mick Jagger
    • Self - The Rolling Stones: vocals…
    Keith Richards
    Keith Richards
    • Self - The Rolling Stones: guitar…
    Charlie Watts
    Charlie Watts
    • Self - The Rolling Stones: drums
    Ronnie Wood
    Ronnie Wood
    • Self - The Rolling Stones: guitar
    Darryl Jones
    Darryl Jones
    • Self - The Rolling Stones: bass guitar
    Chuck Leavell
    • Self - The Rolling Stones: keyboards
    Bobby Keys
    Bobby Keys
    • Self - The Rolling Stones: saxophone
    Bernard Fowler
    • Self - The Rolling Stones: vocals
    Lisa Fischer
    Lisa Fischer
    • Self - The Rolling Stones: vocals
    Blondie Chaplin
    Blondie Chaplin
    • Self - The Rolling Stones: vocals
    Tim Ries
    • Self - The Rolling Stones: saxophone…
    Kent S. Smith
    • Self - The Rolling Stones: trumpet
    • (as Kent Smith)
    Michael Davis
    • Self - The Rolling Stones: trombone
    Albert Maysles
    Albert Maysles
    • Self - Camera in Hand
    Christina Aguilera
    Christina Aguilera
    • Self
    Buddy Guy
    Buddy Guy
    • Self
    Jack White
    Jack White
    • Self
    • (as Jack White III)
    Tom Beaver
    Tom Beaver
    • Man in audience
    • Dirección
      • Martin Scorsese
    • Todo el elenco y el equipo
    • Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro

    Opiniones de usuarios76

    7.112.5K
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    Opiniones destacadas

    8stensson

    Enlightment

    Sometimes you might feel that the rock concert movie genre hasn't moved much since "Woodstock". Which doesn't mean Scorsese doesn't manage the tradition in a very proper way.

    You certainly have the concert feeling here. But Stones have made it both better and worse. There are ups and downs in this performance, with an absolute peak from the blues man Buddy Guy entering stage.

    The clips from old Stones interviews are entertaining, but what's the purpose of having them there? If they are supposed to be included, they should have taken a bigger place, telling something more of this band, which in itself forms essentials of rock history. Anyway, good work by Scorsese, although traditional.
    ametaphysicalshark

    If only all concert films were like this

    "Shine a Light" is Martin Scorsese's second real concert film after 1978's "The Last Waltz", which by now is generally acknowledged as a masterpiece and is my favorite film by the director. I really hope we will see more concert films from Scorsese in the future, because "Shine a Light" is further excellence from him. If all, or even a significant number of concert films were filmed with such skill and exuded such energy, there would be far more of them made and far more released theatrically.

    "Shine a Light" is a concert film. I'm not sure I'd call it a documentary on the Rolling Stones so much as a filming (a brilliant filming) of an especially good concert they played recently. Scorsese is smart enough, however, to use interviews and clips from all stages of the Stones' career for purposes of humor and even commentary on various aspects of music and the music business, as well as the band itself.

    Your average Rolling Stones fan waiting to see a Rolling Stones concert and who isn't a fan of film probably will be bored during the film's opening scenes, but for those interested in film, they provide a fascinating glimpse into the marriage of live music and film-making, which doesn't happen as much as it should. It's also quite an intimate look at the Stones as a bunch of people, exposing them in the same sort of way the non-concert scenes in "Gimme Shelter" did. Then again, how much of it is real and how much is an act is really the essential question that we will forever be asking about this band.

    "Shine a Light" isn't a document of an important historical event like Scorsese's "The Last Waltz" or the Maysles Bros' "Gimme Shelter" was as a Rolling Stones film, so one shouldn't expect that sort of greatness from "Shine a Light". What one should expect is a great concert, filmed with great skill, tasteful guest appearances that do nothing but add to the music, and a gorgeous film interspersed tastefully with archive footage chosen carefully and played at just the right moments.

    The Stones and Scorsese are on top form here, making this a memorable and exciting concert film and the sort of marriage of film-making and live music that really should happen more often.

    8.5/10
    7verbal-2002

    Shine No Light

    Scorsese has tried his best to recreate the glory of The Last Waltz but seems to have stumbled at the impossible: how can you recreate or better what is arguably the best concert movie of all time? Quite simply, you can't. The intro to this movie is as strange as its ending. There was obviously some sort of ruckus between Mick and Scorsese, because the lack of backstage footage and constant arguments between the two regarding camera, stage and setlists seemed to have set Scorsese on a "I find it very hard to work with this diva" twist on the movie.

    This seems to dissipate with the beginning of the actual concert. Maybe he's trying to tell us that Mick's diva-esquire attitude and pointless demands fall apart and don't matter once they come onstage. It's all lost in the music.

    As far as camera-work is concerned, this movie is well above most in terms of energy and fluidness (regardless of the lack of rehearsals Martin seems to emphasise). The two cameras behind the front row of people give a great sense of being in the crowd looking up at Jagger and Richards.

    The gig itself is as good as any Bigger Bang tour I've seen. Anyone who has seen the Stones live in the past 5 years knows exactly what to expect and they don't disappoint in this show.

    Scorsese cuts to archive footage of the band being interviewed at certain times. As interesting as these are to see, they seem to not fit as effectively as the cut scenes in The Last Waltz did. They almost seem separate to the rest of the film.

    The performances by Jack White and Buddy Guy are interesting. It seems like they appeared onstage unannounced and had no previous rehearsal with the band and just tried to play along. Especially for Buddy Guy. His usually inch-perfect solos and licks seem rigid and refrained. Its as if he's waiting for cues from the Stones that never come. Christina Aguilaira's appearance proves she certainly has talent in her well-trained voice, but seems like a strange cameo.

    All in all, I'd say this is a pretty decent concert movie, but nothing special in terms of movies in general. If you're a fan of the Stones, you'll enjoy this, but it won't shine any special light on the band themselves.
    7Chris_Docker

    A 'sell-out' concert?

    Take some lyrics:

    1. "May the good lord shine a light on you Make every song your favourite tune"

    2. "You call yourself a Christian, I call you a hypocrite. You call yourself a patriot, well I think you're full of sh*t."

    Both are recent songs by the Rolling Stones. A 1960s rock and roll group. (Band members are now in their sixties.)

    Verse 2 is from an anti-Bush song called Sweet Neo Con. An interesting point from which to start a movie perhaps. Veteran director Scorsese even chooses a concert at which democrat Bill Clinton is in attendance. But the song, even though part of the tour, is missing. This film has no hidden agenda or meaning. Sweetness and Light. Shine a Light.

    If you are a current fan of the Stones, such details matter little. This is a concert film (at the New York Beacon Theatre) to die for. Production values are far better than any comparable TV live event. A concert to enjoy in surround sound, in a comfortable theatre, with every detail up close on a big screen (or even IMAX). Not a film about lyrics. Not a documentary of these extraordinary long careers. Just a big, brilliant concert.

    It rather feels as if the Stones hired the best filmmaker in the business. Who in turn hires the best cinematographers. Who in turn capture every dramatic gesture. Every Mick Jagger mince. Every crowd-pleasing wave. Each impressive guitar riff. Each colourful stage contrast. Each theatrical burst of light. Everything. Except film fans may struggle and ask, "But isn't this supposed to be a Martin Scorsese film?"

    When Scorsese did Bob Dylan (No Direction Home), his achievement was in the insights into a complex man. His film resolved the eternal conflict between Dylan's public personas. Shine a Light, on the other hand, offers no such insight into the stars concerned beyond the current state of their stage performance (impressive though it is).

    There are some nice cinematic touches. It is fun watching Scorsese in front of the camera in the opening scenes. He worries about getting a specific playlist, so he knows whether to be ready for a guitar solo or singer acrobatics. It helps us understand the complexity of filming a live event. The question of the band's age, instead of being disguised, is cleverly made a feature. Scorsese intersperses Beacon Theatre sets with vintage black and white footage of frequent interview questions relating to age. "Can you imagine doing this when you're 60?" and so on. I wince. I had qualms about watching these pensioners prance about on stage. A fan of their early music, I instinctively feel rock stars should die (or at least retire) before they get old. But blues singers look cool old. Why not the Rolling Stones? Keith Richards looks positively cadaverous. A Munster with a mean guitar. And the Rolling Stones are considered chic both by baby boomers and trendy young well-to-dos. Long gone are the days when buying a Stones album was an act of defiance.

    But in spite of the unused Neo Con lyrics and Jagger's single use of the f word in the whole concert, fans seem more concerned that Richards actually smokes a cigarette. A girl in the audience points disapprovingly. The Stones are mainstream. Bill Clinton hails their green credentials. Everyone is lovey-dovey. Much of the concert features impressive showmanship and a high level of professionalism. Jagger never misses a note. The guitar-work is beautiful. And as a role model for pensioners, Jagger's routine is more energetic than any step class. But where was the angst? The blinding energy that seared itself into the brains of the 60s youth? This was a very a different band. I try to forget the old one. I enjoy the toothless new more than I like to admit.

    Shine a Light is a time capsule. The latter years of the most famous rock and roll band in the world. A great British institution preserved for posterity. (It releases the day after Gordon Brown's jovial and equally polished tele-appeal on American Idol. New Labour. New Stones.)

    Well-chosen guest artists spring into sets. Jack White produces a perfect blend of young and old as he duets with Jagger. Christina Aguilera looks stunning in high heels and tights. How could she not fire up the old man? Jagger hugs her bum as they dance to Live With Me. He has new fire in him as he continues with Start Me Up. By the time he sings Brown Sugar, there is a passion to it. The audience wave and cheer in time. When Satisfaction ricochets through the hall it is like watching the legend. The Mick Jagger of old. I'm almost a convert.

    Would it be cynical to say Sympathy for the Devil looked more like a Born-Again pageant? Unappreciative perhaps. The film lover in me would rather have Jean-Luc Godard's film of that title for a sense of the 'real' Rolling Stones. But why should audiences dictate that pop stars – or film directors for that matter – conform to expectation? Accept Shine a Light for the awesome concert film that it is. Miserable old sentimentalists go back to your vinyl. Your 'creative' cinema. There's not much of it here.
    10Quinoa1984

    aka: 'Some Country for Old Men'

    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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    Argumento

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    • Trivia
      Bruce Willis can be seen in the audience wearing a yellow hat.
    • Citas

      Martin Scorsese: Catch on fire? We can't do that. We cannot burn Mick - we cannot burn Mick Jagger... We want the affect, but, we cannot burn him.

    • Créditos curiosos
      From end credits: Every day the Clinton Foundation works to make a difference by finding real and tangible solutions to some of the world's most pressing challenges, including HIV/AIDS, climate change, global poverty, child obesity and many more. For more information visit www.clintonfoundation.org
    • Conexiones
      Edited into The Rolling Stones: Shine a Light Movie Special (2008)
    • Bandas sonoras
      I Can't Be Satisfied
      Written by Muddy Waters (as McKinley Morganfield)

      Performed by Muddy Waters

      Courtesy of Watertoons Music, administered by BUG

      Courtesy of Epic Records, By Arrangement with Sony BMG Music Entertainment

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    Preguntas Frecuentes

    • How long is Shine a Light?Con tecnología de Alexa

    Detalles

    Editar
    • Fecha de lanzamiento
      • 6 de febrero de 2009 (México)
    • País de origen
      • Estados Unidos
    • Idioma
      • Inglés
    • También se conoce como
      • Shine a Light
    • Locaciones de filmación
      • Nueva York, Estados Unidos
    • Productoras
      • Paramount Vantage
      • Concert Productions International
      • Shangri-La Entertainment
    • Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro

    Taquilla

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    • Total en EE. UU. y Canadá
      • USD 5,505,267
    • Fin de semana de estreno en EE. UU. y Canadá
      • USD 1,488,081
      • 6 abr 2008
    • Total a nivel mundial
      • USD 15,773,351
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    Especificaciones técnicas

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    • Tiempo de ejecución
      2 horas 2 minutos
    • Color
      • Color
      • Black and White
    • Mezcla de sonido
      • DTS
      • SDDS
      • Dolby Digital
    • Relación de aspecto
      • 1.85 : 1

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    Mick Jagger, Keith Richards, Charlie Watts, and Ronnie Wood in Rolling Stones: Shine a Light (2008)
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