Except for the singers, musicians, and guests who changed their identities one by one and became undressed male actors, this night's performance has nothing to do with almost women. Clinton was undoubtedly the biggest gimmick. As a guest host, Clinton's wife and daughter also came on stage to greet the old Rolling Stones face-to-face. After that, the performance opened in the electric flint, and the four old Rolling Stones were full of wrinkled faces. Man, driving this chariot that will never run out of fuel, for 40 years, he is still old.
It is absolutely different from the Beetles. Except for the popular chorus, the Beetle's scene is not very popular. It is only because they end too early. The Rolling Stones scene is worth watching every move. Mick Jagger is 60 years old. The bulging blue veins on Keith Richards' furry arm between his guitars are enough to see in this rock-and-roll live-fossil live documentary.
The documentary is somewhat different from the rock scene, and Scorsese pays attention to detail. The performance was interspersed with earlier video records, and the portrayals of the staff before and after the performance were also recorded in detail. The lighting and sound settings are in place, the stage is small, and all the focus is on the wrinkled faces of the four old men and the big mouth of Jagger. This is undoubtedly the hallmark of the Rolling Stones.
During the performance, the Rolling Stones showed a variety of genres including hard rock, unplugged, country fork, blues, etc. The most gratifying thing was that "unplugged time" heard their long-lost million-dollar song "as tears go by", this song The song Rolling Stones is rarely performed on the spot, and this work is also a representative work of "yesterday" during the competition between the Rolling Stones and the Beetles.
In the performance, the Rolling Stones also invited the blus god Buddy Guy to play the piano with Keith Richards on the same stage. The Rolling Stones show ended up being picked up in "my generation," and Scorsese added an interesting tidbit at the end of the credits. Worth watching. The most interesting thing is the last scene. The bright moon rising over the Americas turned into the Rolling Stones logo in an instant. We can finally understand the director's intentions. Note that this is a rock documentary with movie quality, not a movie. What a mess of live-shooting idol images or anything else that has nothing to do with art.
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