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6 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Despite Its Needing A Rewrite For Many Pages, Is Still Effective At Calling Back Memories For Fans Of Rock And Roll.
Although this documentary that focusses upon a rather brief span of U.S. socio/cultural history never quite manages to devise a point of view, it contains enough scarce performance footage to interest enthusiasts of rock and roll and will provide satisfaction to a majority of them, essentially through inclusion of seldom-seen "B" movie clips. The work opens, as does also...
Published on August 22, 2007 by rsoonsa

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36 of 42 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Don't buy this one even 1 star is to much
This dvd is only for people who never heard of Rock 'n' Roll. It's a shame that Michael Ochs (who once send me a personal copy of his wonderful Rock Archives) give so many words and smiles on this bad documantairy. (sorry Michael, when comes a new edition of your great book?) Don't buy this one but if you really want to... you can have mine.
Published on March 30, 2002 by Ben van Althuis


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36 of 42 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Don't buy this one even 1 star is to much, March 30, 2002
By 
Ben van Althuis (Wervershoof, Netherlands) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Hollywood Rocks 'n' Rolls in the '50s (DVD)
This dvd is only for people who never heard of Rock 'n' Roll. It's a shame that Michael Ochs (who once send me a personal copy of his wonderful Rock Archives) give so many words and smiles on this bad documantairy. (sorry Michael, when comes a new edition of your great book?) Don't buy this one but if you really want to... you can have mine.
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3.0 out of 5 stars Better than previously reviewed., November 27, 2006
This review is from: Hollywood Rocks 'n' Rolls in the '50s (DVD)
The last reviewer gave this release an unfair rating. Yes, the film may not say anything new about rock and roll films, but many documentary videos repeat what we already know. This is one of the few that actually deals with the importance of rock and roll in movies. If you were to look at the 50s rock and roll movies without the rock and roll, you will find that they suffered from poor plots and acting. However it was rock and roll that saved them. So Hollywood and rock and roll helped each other and spread the genre to everyone. Where else could you find performances by Frankie Lymon, the Johnny Burnette Trio, Gene Vincent, or Bill Haley? I feel this documentary actually has a lot to share and is very imformative. It MOST CERTAINLY is not a bad documentary, as the other reviewer put it.
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6 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Despite Its Needing A Rewrite For Many Pages, Is Still Effective At Calling Back Memories For Fans Of Rock And Roll., August 22, 2007
By 
rsoonsa (Lake Isabella, California) - See all my reviews
(VINE VOICE)   
This review is from: Hollywood Rocks 'n' Rolls in the '50s (DVD)
Although this documentary that focusses upon a rather brief span of U.S. socio/cultural history never quite manages to devise a point of view, it contains enough scarce performance footage to interest enthusiasts of rock and roll and will provide satisfaction to a majority of them, essentially through inclusion of seldom-seen "B" movie clips. The work opens, as does also another film that it is highlighting within its narrative (THE BLACKBOARD JUNGLE), with a track of the Bill Haley and his Comets version of "Rock Around the Clock", placed behind BLACKBOARD's opening credits, a number widely acknowledged for its establishment of a permanent foundation with which to build large-scale public acceptance of rock and roll, a pop music trend that expanded far beyond any effects that may have come from the somewhat muddled Richard Brooks directed motion picture. Alan Freed, Cleveland, Ohio-cum-New York City disc jockey is seen serving the progress of the new sound, and scenes are shown of his elaborately staged rock and roll events in New York that fixed the attention of what became an exponentially increasing and internationally based teenaged audience. There are numerous excerpts taken from a large number of low budget movies that employ rock and roll themes and musicians, including AMERICAN HOT WAX, purportedly based upon Freed's life (but not firmly based upon actual occurrences), and ROCK! ROCK! ROCK! with 16 year old Tuesday Weld featured and supposedly singing (dubbed by Connie Francis), while there is a raft of filmed shorts documenting contributions from such as Haley, Big Joe Turner, Fats Domino, Chuck Berry, Little Richard, and many others. Principal commentator for this olio is Michael Ochs, identified as a "rock and roll historian", whose general approval unsurprisingly verges upon adulation toward the various performers on view, none more so than Elvis Presley, shown in his initial television appearance (28 January 1956), his first screen "musicals", and a wealth of other snippets, of both the often- and seldom-seen varieties. A viewer will also watch as well as listen to copious segments dealing with the lives (both on stage and off) of Jerry Lee Lewis and Buddy Holly, Lewis an antidote for any form of ennui, while sweeping claims for Holly's musical significance are largely based, as pointed out by Ochs, upon the bespectacled singer/guitarist's unprepossessing exterior that only increased his attractiveness to those adolescents who were keenly aware of their own lack of charisma. A specially valuable component of the film depicts the Payola scandal that occurred during the late 1950s, effectively ending the career of Freed because of Federal government accusations that he had accepted bribes in exchange for his efforts to build reputations of performers whose recordings he promoted (another disc jockey, Dick Clark, charged with the same violation, temporarily relinquished his drive for personal success in favour of the demands of prosecutors, thereby preserving his reputation). Issued as part of a Passport Video DVD package, this work benefits from bright visuals (1 x 33 x 1), and includes a small amount of letterboxing, while its Dolby Digital 2.0 sound is monophonic, moot in the event, since but few tracks of the period had the advantage of stereophonic reproduction. The Passport DVD box promises the inclusion of an additional full-length feature film: ROCK! ROCK! ROCK! starring Freed, but it is not there, although in its stead it is filled with approximately one hour of "Sidetracks", vignettes of greatly varying duration showcasing Presley; Gene Vincent; Lewis; Tommy Sands; Berry, et alia. Two sections would have to their advantage been eliminated in their entirety: a lengthy interview with Sands who is apparently intrigued with his own sexual history, and a plasticized Mamie Van Doren, for whom the passage of years has clearly produced little in the way of artistic acuity or cognitive common sense. However, the sounds of rock and roll, a phenomenon that ranged across the United States in quick fashion and around the world, as well, form the cardinal reason to watch this documentary piece and for a large share of its viewers this will be satisfying.
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0 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars r'n'r video, March 4, 2010
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This review is from: Hollywood Rocks 'n' Rolls in the '50s (DVD)
Did not realize how corny these old 50's rock'n'roll movies were....but now i do.
quality was fine .....nobody's fault how bad the movie was....did i really go see that in the 50's??? no wonder I am messed up
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Hollywood Rocks 'n' Rolls in the '50s
Hollywood Rocks 'n' Rolls in the '50s by Michael Ochs (DVD - 2000)
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