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Message to Love - The Isle of Wight Festival
 
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Message to Love - The Isle of Wight Festival (1997)

Starring: Ian Anderson, Joan Baez Director: Murray Lerner Rating: NR (Not Rated) Format: DVD
3.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (60 customer reviews)

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This documentary by Murray Lerner (From Mao to Mozart) was shot in 1970, but for many reasons was not shown to the public until 1995 in Great Britain. In an important way, it is the final chapter in an unofficial trilogy of concert films (along with Woodstock and Gimme Shelter) that together paint a picture of the highest and lowest points of Woodstock Nation politics: from mass goodwill to anarchy to outright stupidity. On the one hand, Message to Love is a rock & roll movie with several performances that are outright revelations (the Who's triumphant show, the Doors' "The End"), some that are awfully good (Jimi Hendrix's "Machine Gun"), and more than enough that are superfluous (Ten Days After, Emerson, Lake, and Palmer, Jethro Tull). On the other hand, Lerner's cameras are trained on the increasingly testy relationship between nomadic hippies who travel a long way to see the show but refuse to pay, and concert producers who resort to using guard dogs, cops, and aluminum walls to keep crashers at a distance. Just how bad does the mood become after several days of this? Check out the scene in which Joni Mitchell breaks down in tears after singing her ode to peace and love, "Woodstock," before this lot. In an era when we've become used to extraordinary security and high ticket prices at rock concerts, it's perhaps hard to grasp what the fuss was about at the Isle of Wight. But Lerner's amazing film helps a viewer get a sense of what was really at stake in that period before rock & roll was a corporate matter, and when kids naively thought it was theirs for the taking. --Tom Keogh


Product Description

Two hours of footage by the who the moddy blues and others. Including the last stage performances by jimi hendrix and the doors jim morrison. Studio: Sony Music Release Date: 02/24/2004 Run time: 120 minutes Rating: Nr

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60 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
3.6 out of 5 stars (60 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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69 of 71 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Generally satisfying film of classic 1970 rock festival, September 3, 1999
By A Customer
Director Murray Lerner and his film crew were hired by the Isle of Wight Festival promoters to make a movie of the events and music that took place from August 26-31st 1970. Due to financial problems and lack of interest from the film distributors, the film footage sat unreleased for twenty-five years (although bits of Hendrix, The Who & Free's performances surfaced in other presentations). Before the 1995 movie was released I absolutely hungered to see anything of this footage. Admittedly, my anticipation for the film was incredible. Eventually I got my wish. Fortunately, I was generally satisfied with MESSAGE TO LOVE, although I did have reservations. First the good: I was able to see The Doors, Moody Blues, Jethro Tull, Joni Mitchell, Miles Davis, Free, Taste, etc. in their prime. These are classic performances, mostly well played. The scene of Kris Kristofferson getting booed off stage haunted me for weeks; I felt sorry for the guy. Too bad they didn't show his come-back performance a few days later, where he was better received.

The dissapointments: I want more footage. A lot of the music performances are extremely edited-down. Donovan is only seen for like three seconds. John Sebastian's show stopping performance is poorly edited too as they come in for the ending of his song. Performances from Tony Joe White, Melanie, Cactus, Procol Harum weren't even included in favor of "Machine Gun" (Hendrix) "All Right Now" (Free) "Young Man Blues" (The Who) ...redundant footage, because they were all available in other presentations.

Lastly, the film is generally downbeat, focusing in on the problems that plagued the festival. Actually, the violence and unpleasentness is overplayed. This was actually a good festival, with good bands and a lot of positive aspects. Too bad Lerner couldn't focus more on this. Nevertheless, it's still a fine film and I hope to see more footage released to the public.

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42 of 47 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars "Whoever knocks down the fence gets a free ball!", May 23, 2004
By W. Langan "take403" (the end of the world to your town!) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
Most of the performances are good, although a little too brief (and some songs are probably edited), which is why I had to dock this review one star. This is more of a documentary of the event than anything else. You'll see the promoters and the crowd get almost as much time on the camera as the performers. The Isle of Wight wasn't exactly Britain's answer to Woodstock (Altamont ended the Woodstock spirit and this is Hippydom's last true hurrah), but still a great festival.

This has poignant moments, like Jimi Hendrix' final performance featuring "Message to Love," "Machine Gun" and "Voodoo Chile (Slight Return)," one of the Doors' final performances (Jim Morrison looks sad and out of it) featuring "When the Music's Over" and "The End" and Joni Mitchell bursting out in tears after one rambunctious hippie interrupts her set while playing "Woodstock" (he's lucky he didn't try interrupting the Who's set!). She carries on singing "Big Yellow Taxi." After instances like Altamont, the promoters add security like a metal fence dividing the young teens and adults (some English, some American) who've paid admission and those who haven't and police dogs. So, naturally, there's plenty of arguments between the promoters and the music fans. Due to the war between them, Kris Kristoferson is unduly booed onstage. Folks are too busy trying to get in to listen to the original "Me and Bobbie McGee." Joan Baez, after her performance of "Let It Be" is interviewed. She's honest and says "This is my job, so naturally, I expect to be paid." A humorous moment is Tiny Tim singing via megaphone "There'll Always Be An England." A sad moment is when one hippie says he's given his young son LSD (nowadays, a social worker would probably take the son away from him). It's amusing to see a young thin Ian Anderson perform with Jethro Tull ("Whoever said we wouldn't perform tonight is full of...") on "My Sunday Feeeling" and a young thin Paul Rogers perform "All Right Now" with Free. This is also Emerson, Lake and Palmer's debut performance (each of them celebrates in full flamboyance by Emerson nearly destroying his organ, Lake setting off a cannon and Palmer removing his shirt while performing "Pictures at an Exhibition/Blue Rondo a la Turk"). It's also one of the Moody Blues' 1st performances live. Fortunately for the freeloaders (nowadays one would find it extraordinary that they would spend a lot of money on crossing the boat to the Isle and not schill out 3 English pounds), the fence is taken down and all hold hands in peace, while a guitar plays "Amazing Grace." You really sympathize with Rikki (one of the emcees), as he bears his heart with the audience that he and the other promoters will have lots of fees to pay for this decision. As the festival comes to end, Rikki later sums it all up when he says "This is the last great event." One of the carpenters looks a little like Jerry Garcia!

An edition with more complete performances would be great in the future. In the meantime, this will have to do. By the way, this is a 2 sided disk (at least my copy is) and if it ends with Joni Mitchell singing "Big Yellow Taxi," turn the disk over and you'll get Miles Davis and the rest of the program.
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23 of 24 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars The music too-often takes a back seat to the promoters., July 16, 2000
The big difference between this movie and Woodstock: Woodstock had the non-musical footage serving as interludes to the performances. Here the impression I get is largely the opposite, although there is quite a bit of music seen and/or heard throughout the film.

The talent roster is roughly equal between the two festivals (Jimi Hendrix appeared at both). However, I think fans of most of the MESSAGE TO LOVE artists will be irked by how little screen-time that most of the musicians receive. For example, I am a disappointed Miles Davis fan (his segment lasts about a minute), while the footage of another of my musical favorites (Joni Mitchell) is preoccupied with her tearful reaction to an impatient crowd rather than her music.

Too many of the featured artists (Tull, Miles, Joni, etc.) have loyal followings that would warrant an alternative multi-volume edition featuring their complete performances (this has already happened with sets by Hendrix and The Who). That would release this movie from the inflated expectations of fans who've waited up to a quarter-century to hopefully see significant chunks of the artists' sets. We could then be more receptive to the story the film-makers are trying to tell.

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Most Recent Customer Reviews

4.0 out of 5 stars good film, has last Jim Morrison performance
It says on the DVD box this film is "highlights" of the Isle of Wight, so that eing said, its a good highlights film. Read more
Published 2 months ago by G. Harper

5.0 out of 5 stars BEEN LOOKING FOR THIS DVD FOR A LONG TIME
I FOUND THE FULL VERSION OF "THE ISLE OF WIGHT" ON AMAZON. IT HAS MANY OF THE BANDS THAT PLAYED AND NOT JUST ONE. ALSO, IT SHOWS WHAT WENT ON BEHIND THE SCENES. Read more
Published 4 months ago by Sherry H

4.0 out of 5 stars A Darker Woodstock
There was definitely tension in the air at this festival. The movie captures this wonderfully with some great footage between the acts. Read more
Published 7 months ago by Morello

5.0 out of 5 stars a milestone in history
i was a young lad in stokes bay, gosport on the other side of the solent when this happened and remember the long hairs camped on the beach with bonfires .. Read more
Published 8 months ago by Graham V. Clark

3.0 out of 5 stars The Magic and the Misery
Due to numerous issues, "Message To Love: The Isle of Wight Festival" didn't reach theaters until 1997. Not sure if it was worth the wait. Read more
Published 11 months ago by Chris Wilson

5.0 out of 5 stars greatest festival ever
This is documentation of the greatest festival of all time. It gives all sides of the festival. You will not be dissapointed when you buy this!
Published 17 months ago by Craig M. Schuster

5.0 out of 5 stars This movie is heaven
I don't get the criticism of this movie. Firstly, it's damn cheap - so whatever you get is value. Secondly, I've never bothered to watch the actual movie all the way through - all... Read more
Published on May 12, 2007 by E. J. Ryan

1.0 out of 5 stars When the music's over
A poorly made documentary focusing on the problems surrounding the festival's producers. Every music clip in this film has been edited down, sometimes to no more than a few... Read more
Published on February 13, 2007 by James Harrison

4.0 out of 5 stars The music is great but...
There's great vintage shots and sounds from Free, Tull, The Who, ELP and others but all the other documentary stuff, while interesting, I found distracting and boring.
Published on January 3, 2007 by John Laing

3.0 out of 5 stars kinda disappointing
Depending on whether your interest lies in viewing this as a historical document or as a concert video you will probably be either less or more disappointed. Read more
Published on July 3, 2006 by JMF

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