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Festival Express (2004)

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Festival Express
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Directed byBob Smeaton
CastJanis Joplin, Janis Joplin & The Full Tilt Boogie Band, The Grateful Dead, The Band, Buddy Guy and Jerry Garcia
Theatrical ReleaseNovember 2, 2004
DVD ReleaseNovember 2, 2004
Running Time90 minutes
MPAA RatingR (Restricted)
UPC Code794043757327
Buy this item$13.99 at Amazon.com
As of Sep 4 3:31 EDT (details)
2 DVD, Warner Brothers, Usually ships in 24 hours, AC-3, Closed-captioned, Color, Compilation, Dolby, DTS Surround Sound, DVD-Video, Subtitled, Widescreen, NTSC
Languages: English (Original Language - Dolby Digital 2.0 Surround), English (Subtitled), Spanish (Subtitled)
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User Reviews

Average user review: 4.5 (95 reviews)

rating: 5 QuoteMakes you wish you'd been on that train!Quote
God, what a party! Great music from some unique performers.

The Band: Truly soulful rocking, featuring the greatest unsung Soul-singer ever, Richard Manuel.

Janis Joplin: Enjoying herself and (as usual) pouring everything into her performance.

Grateful Dead: Melodic and relaxed, with Garcia stretching out and embracing his audience and fellow performers.

Buddy Guy: Rocking out with a glorious 'Money'

And the jamming on the train: Danko and Janis having inebriated fun singing together with Jerry Garcia.

This is a fantastic film that really makes you wish you could have been right there. As Janis crowed in an audio clip released on 'Joplin In Concert', 'It sure turned a trainload of freaks into a party, man! Didn't it boys!' September 2, 2008

rating: 4 QuoteGreat gift for the sixties generationQuote
Festival Express is a blast from the past - the sixties and seventies generation will not believe how young and thin they once were. A very good birthday present. August 4, 2008

rating: 4 QuoteGood Times!Quote
This is a good way to get a glimpse of what life on the road was like 'back in the day'. This tour wouldn't/couldn't happen today. Despite some logistical problems, and misguided college kids who don't quite think it all the way through there was probably never a better overall time than this train trip across Canada. Well worth watching! Steve Urbauer August 1, 2008

rating: 5 QuoteA perfect "snapshot" of Rock's Golden EraQuote
Oh, how I wish I had been able to "Ride that train"... First off, the music aspect of the film is worth twice the price of the DVD alone. To see and feel Janis in her final days is beyond epic. I originally saw this in the Boulder Theater at a pre-release screening, and after both her performances the audience was literally speechless and silent for a few seconds before someone simply said what we were all thinking; "Wow." From the Dead to Buddy Guy, and the Band to ShaNaNa, it is a completely phenomenal musical experience.

However, the candid and often hysterical footage from the actual "trip" itself is by far the greatest part of the film. Imagine some of America's greatest musicians living a week in a Canadian fantasy world. Excess, genius, and hilarity all rolling down the tracks. Rick Danko, Janis, and Jerry singing in an drunken, acid soaked haze is probably one of the funniest rock and roll moments ever captured on film. (You know when janis Joplin asks, "How are you doing man?" to Rick, the world is definitely turning upside-down.)

Buy this, you won't regret it. July 9, 2008

rating: 4 QuoteExciting Lost performance footage Quote
The summer of 1970 - one of my best - definitely for *music*. Here we have some of the biggest icons of that period, up close and personal. Maybe a little too personal, as we watch many musical genuises, and apparently very decent decent, use legal and illegal substances well beyond necessity, and make us realize that none of 'em were role models outside of the instruments, the lights, the imagery.
The film includes poignant reminders of the downside of the Summer of '67 meets Woodstock era: alot of wild people trying to destroy the efforts of alot of folks who invested more than money in trying to provide respectable entertainment for them. In one spot way up North a group manages to at least slow down the proceedings and get performers like the Grateful Dead to perform an impromptu concert for free. Jerry Garcia is the diplomat - got it togther in a calm manner.
The progressive promoter, who road the train along with the musicians, emerges as quite a character: a kind of hippie Edward G. Robinson, assertively convincing a liquor store manager to sell him a prop display for an inspired application back on the train, knocking down a "98 pound weakling" of a local politician who demands that he lose considerable money in deference to his new, youthful constituency, who are somewhat undecided about the merits of Capitalism; tossing an "activist" down a flight of stairs.
As to the music, if you're a Grateful Dead or Janis Joplin fan, you've got it made in the shade (though "Cry Baby" is curiously below her standards here). If you're into Delaney & Bonnie, unless I missed something, all I see of Bonnie is a shot of her mellowing out on the train and another shot of her inshadow watching another lady sing the blues. Delaney & Bonnie & Friends were huge at the time...not much here.
Disc Two has very little content.
Overall quality, excellent. April 9, 2008

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