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Home 0-9 A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
 

The Last Waltz - 1978
70s films, seventies films, the last waltz
Director(s)
Martin Scorsese 

Writer(s)
Geoffrey Chaucer  poem The Canterbury Tales: Introduction

Producer(s)
L.A. Johnson line producer: concert
Frank Marshall line producer: studio & documentary
Steven Prince associate producer
Robbie Robertson producer
Jonathan T. Taplin executive producer (as Jonathan Taplin)
Joel Chernoff producer (uncredited)

Cast
Rick Danko - (Bass, Violin & Vocal)
Levon Helm - (Drums, Mandolin & Vocal)
Garth Hudson -  (Organ, Accordion, Saxophone & Synthesizers)
Richard Manuel -  (Piano, Keyboards, Drums & Vocal)
Robbie Robertson -  (Lead Guitar & Vocal)
Paul Butterfield 
Eric Clapton 
Neil Diamond
Dr. John 
Bob Dylan 
Lawrence Ferlinghetti 
Emmylou Harris -
Ronnie Hawkins -
Howard Johnson 
Michael McClure 
Joni Mitchell 
Van Morrison 
Pinetop Perkins 
Martin Scorsese 
Mavis Staples 
Roebuck 'Pops' Staples 
Ringo Starr 
Muddy Waters 
Ron Wood 
Neil Young -
Bill Graham -
Robert Guidry 

Review by Jack Gattanella

The Last Waltz (1978)
Cinema Verite- Scorsese style that will appease fans and non-fans,

Martin Scorsee shows here that he can do a documentary with vigor, observance in the eye, and by letting the performers speak for themselves more than anything. By showing the final concert of the band called The Band, he ends up going further with funny and insightful interviews, not to mention a riveting bit of business on a sound stage. Very intriguing, especially as I have become more familiar with the songs and performers. Note the photography- this type of style used two years later in the boxing sequences in Raging Bull (staying with the stage, practically not cutting to the audience). Great talent includes Van Morrison, Dr. John, Ringo Starr, Muddy Waters (perhaps the best), Neil Young, Bob Dylan and Eric Clapton. Only minor liability is that the performances may seem to slug for some, but this is more of a subjective thing, depending on how much you think the performers are putting in. It's definitely a bang worth the buck. A+

 

 
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