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Stop Making Sense 1984 123movies

Stop Making Sense 1984 123movies

Why stop making sense? Why a movie? Why a big suit? Where do the odd movements come from? What will the band do next?Nov. 16, 198488 Min.
Your rating: 0
8 1 vote

Synopsis

Watch: Stop Making Sense 1984 123movies, Full Movie Online – David Byrne walks onto the stage and does a solo “Psycho Killer.” Jerry Harrison, Tina Weymouth and Chris Frantz join him for two more songs. The crew is busy, still setting up. Then, three more musicians and two back-up singers join the band. Everybody sings, plays, harmonizes, dances, and runs. They change instruments and clothes. Bryne appears in the Big Suit. The backdrop is often black, but sometimes it displays words, images, or children’s drawings. The band cooks for 18 songs, the lyrics are clear, the house rocks. In this concert film, the Talking Heads hardly talk, don’t stop, and always make sense..
Plot: A concert film documenting Talking Heads at the height of their popularity, on tour for their 1983 album “Speaking in Tongues.” The band takes the stage one by one and is joined by a cadre of guest musicians for a career-spanning and cinematic performance that features creative choreography and visuals.
Smart Tags: #concert_film #live_in_concert_recording #national_film_registry #song #band #suit #stage #musician #cult_film #choreography #singing #electric_guitar #long_take #chiaroscuro #title_based_on_song #performance #dancing #audience #rock_music #new_wave #independent_film


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Ratings:

8.6/10 Votes: 15,603
100% | RottenTomatoes
89/100 | MetaCritic
N/A Votes: 184 Popularity: 11.099 | TMDB

Reviews:

Pure cinema
‘Stop Making Sense’ is more than simply a concert film. It is pure cinema. It engages all of the senses, it creates a mood, it establishes an atmosphere, it has narrative logic, and it jolts the viewer with electric energy. You can’t sit still while watching this. You can’t keep your head from bobbing, or your mouth from moving, if you know the words to the songs.

Twenty years later, the sound and image of Talking Heads still feels new, maybe even post-new. It’s frightening to look at this film and then consider that all of the Talking Heads are now in their fifties, and David Byrne’s hair is as white as Steve Martin’s. Byrne’s music has mellowed just as people mellow with age, and his fascinating career along with the direction it’s taken is emblematic of the excitement that youth brings to an artist’s work. To watch ‘Stop Making Sense’ is to be alive, and for someone who never had and probably never will have the opportunity to see Talking Heads live, and even for those who have, it is a blessing to have a film such as this to preserve the unmatched innovation and energy of this band. Watching David Byrne perform in this film is an awesome sight. Schwarzenegger and Stallone were never this thrilling.

Review By: MichaelCarmichaelsCar
Life During Showtime
“Stop Making Sense” cemented the Talking Heads’ place as the Beatles of college rock, capturing the band in all its art-funk glory. Part performance art, part low-key workout, “Stop Making Sense” benefits from a set of 16 quality songs, an ever-changing visual style that never loses its inventiveness, and a lead performance by David Byrne that has to be seen to be believed.

He jogs around the stage. He bends his body in weird contortions. He puts on a really big suit. From the beginning to end, he has his shirt collar buttoned to the top like a Catholic schoolboy, and I’m not sure how or why.

“How” and “why” are words that pop up a lot while watching this. Talking Heads were weird even for the punk/new wave crowd; they wore their hair like accountants, mined everything from disco to doo-wop to African exotica for their sound, and pulled off the trick of being both mocking and reverential. So whether it’s Byrne dancing with a living-room lamp or words like “facelift” and “sandwich” appearing on screen, the viewer is well advised to follow the advice of the title and just let the goofy, heady mess roll over you. You’ll probably find yourself having a bit of fun.

It helps if you like their music. You don’t hear much of it these days it seems. People know “Life During Wartime” and “Once In A Lifetime,” while “Take Me To The River” and “Burning Down The House” were Top 40 hits in the U.S. But the most familiar tune here is probably the one non-Talking Heads song, “Genius Of Love,” which is performed by the band’s Byrne-less incarnation, the Tom Tom Club. That’s because Mariah Carey sampled it (read “sang over it”) for one of her big hits, “Fantasy.”

Frankly, the band as individuals aren’t all that interesting. They don’t play off each other or the audience in any way, leaving it to Byrne to sell each song. Jerry Harrison, one of the four Heads, seems AWOL even on the middle of the stage. Bringing up a few session players like Bernie Worrell, the P-Funk keyboardist, helps the film avoid this “boring white guys playing their music” trap at least somewhat, though if the mission of this film is to introduce us to the Talking Heads, it’s certainly no “Hard Day’s Night” or “Last Waltz.”

But the songs are good, and Byrne works through his bemused detachment to become quite passionate on some selected numbers. His “Once In A Lifetime” is one of the great screen performances of 1984. Goofy lighting sets up “Swamp” and “What A Day That Was” and there’s oddball tricks aplenty throughout. I like the lower-key “Heaven,” a wistful number about “a place where nothing ever happens” which Byrne delivers with the right amount of grace while bassist Tina Weymouth delivers some solid accompaniment.

I see a lot of times where the notes being played or hit don’t correspond with what’s on screen. The film was shot over a period of days, and then edited together, but judging from the perfect quality of the performed pieces, I sense some post-game “sweetening” went on. But it’s a nice piece to watch, very sublime, and the new DVD treatment is a decided gem worth having. You’ll wish you were back in the 1980s when the Heads were the newest thing, though they never really got old. At least they will always be fresh and alive and together on “Stop Making Sense.”

Review By: slokes

Other Information:

Original Title Stop Making Sense
Release Date 1984-11-16
Release Year 1984

Original Language en
Runtime 1 hr 28 min (88 min), 1 hr 40 min (100 min) (VHS)
Budget 1200000
Revenue 4978922
Status Released
Rated Not Rated
Genre Documentary, Music
Director Jonathan Demme
Writer Jonathan Demme, Talking Heads
Actors David Byrne, Bernie Worrell, Alex Weir
Country United States
Awards 3 wins & 1 nomination
Production Company N/A
Website N/A


Technical Information:

Sound Mix Dolby Digital (1999 re-release), Stereo
Aspect Ratio 1.85 : 1
Camera Panaflex Camera and Lenses by Panavision
Laboratory N/A
Film Length N/A
Negative Format 35 mm
Cinematographic Process Spherical
Printed Film Format Digital (Digital Cinema Package DCP), 35 mm

Stop Making Sense 1984 123movies
Stop Making Sense 1984 123movies
Stop Making Sense 1984 123movies
Stop Making Sense 1984 123movies
Original title Stop Making Sense
TMDb Rating 8.304 184 votes

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