The Road to God Knows Where/Live at the Paradiso (1990)
Facts
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The Road to God Knows Where/Live at the Paradiso
DVD Price: You save 12%! As of Oct 9 8:30 EDT (details)
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| Cast | Nick Cave & the Bad Seeds |
| Theatrical Release | November 30, 1989 |
| DVD Release | January 24, 2006 |
| Running Time | 168 minutes |
| MPAA Rating | NR (Not Rated) |
| UPC Code | 724596931097 |
| Buy this item | $13.99 at Amazon.com As of Oct 9 8:30 EDT (details) 3 DVD, Mute U.S., Usually ships in 24 hours, Box set, Color, DVD-Video, Live, NTSC Languages: English (Original Language) Or 11 new from $11.39, 2 used from $7.49 |
About The Road to God Knows Where/Live at the Paradiso
Previously available on VHS, now released on DVD for the first time! 'The Road To God Knows Where' is a film by Uli M. Schueppel featuring a cast of Nick Cave, members of the Bad Seeds as well as Anita Lane, Lydia Lunch, Jim Thirwell and more. 'Live At The Paradiso' is a full-length live concert from the famed Paradiso Club in Amsterdam from 1992 featuring Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds performing "The Mercy Seat", "The Ship Song", "Tupelo", amongst others.
DVD Features:
2 DVD
DVD 1:
'The Road To God Knows Where', A Film by Uli M. Schueppel
'The Song' A Short Film by Uli M. Schueppel
City Of Refuge
DVD 2:
'Live At The Paradiso', Amsterdam (1992)
Intro
The Mercy Seat
Jack The Ripper
The Ship Song
Tupelo
Deanna
The Good Son
The Carny
Papa Won’t Leave You, Henry
The Weeping Song
In The Ghetto
From Her To Eternity
New Morning
Website Links
- Movie Review Query Engine - Directory of movie reviews.
- IMDb - Features plot summaries, reviews, cast lists, and theatre schedules.
- Art.com - Search for The Road to God Knows Where/Live at the Paradiso posters.
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User Reviews
Average user review:| DISAPPOINTING!!! |
| cool but far from perfect. |
the performance is much more fun to watch but the image quality isn't that great and whoever edited it cut and pasted multiple performances together rather than just presenting one concert like I would have preferred. It's distracting to see what Nick's wearing change from shot to shot.
Performance wise it's tight it's the dvd that's shaky. September 11, 2006
| An insane carreer that leads to God knows where |
Now there is a double bill on dvd: the black & white documentary `The Road to God knows where', which can be best described as a `behind the scenes of Nick and The Bad Seeds on tour', and the 1992 concert in Paradiso, Amsterdam.
The documentary is a deliberatly paced, understated, non-explaning series of impressions. No biography here, no guiding voice-over or cinematic manipulation: just scenes which themselves often do not really have a point, but are, as a whole, a pure look at The Man as he really is, calm, dead-pan funny at times, but often serious and quiet. Not at all the rockbeast he sometimes is during his shows. To some this may simply be a dull film without real climaxes or `exceptional happenings', but to the real fans it gives a true feeling of an almost Jim Jarmusch road movie a.k.a. "slices of life".
The second disc contains the live concert in Holland and this show happens to be the perfect bridge between the crazy, insane Early Years and the more mature and structured performance of the exceptional singer / songwriter Nick Cave is now (`God is in the house').
In Amsterdam's Paradiso Nick jumps all over the stage, shouting and screaming as a man in rage, pleading as a mad preacher and even kneeling down, either before himself (`The good son') or the audience (`Papa won't leave you, Henry').
There is no rest in this almost psychotic man, not even during the Elvis-evergreen `In the ghetto', although it is, together with a delirious performance of `The carny', a point of ease and rest in between the real adrenaline pumping classics like `The mercy seat', `Tupelo' and `From her to eternity'.
The latter song is sung with an almost grunging voice at first, but it never really goes over the edge; Nick is just an intens and hyperenergetic performer with an almost Biblical mission: the stage is his altar and The Caveman is there to convert the crowd.
No rest for the pity or the wicked. And thank God somewhere down the road for that.
February 10, 2006
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