Stones at the Max
Rolling Stones: Live at the Max | |
---|---|
Directed by | Julien Temple David Douglas Roman Kroitor Noel Archambault Christine Strande: ("2,000 Light Years from Home") |
Produced by | Michael Cohl Nicholas J. Gray Toni Myers André Picard Martin Walters Robbie Williams |
Starring | The Rolling Stones |
Cinematography | David Douglas Andrew Kitzanuk |
Edited by | Daniel Blevins Jim Gable Lisa Grootenboer Toni Myers |
Distributed by | IMAX |
Release dates | June, 1992 re-released 1996 |
Running time | 89 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Box office | $3 million (US/Canada rentals)[1] |
Rolling Stones: Live at the Max (also known as Stones at the Max) is a concert film by The Rolling Stones released in 1991. It was specially filmed in IMAX during the Urban Jungle Tour in Europe in 1990. It was one of the first efforts at presenting entertainment in the IMAX format.
Rolling Stones: Live at the Max premiered 25 October 1991 in Los Angeles at the California Museum of Science and Industry. In the UK it was shown at the National Museum of Photography, Film and Television in Bradford, Yorkshire in 1992. The tagline was "Larger than life".
Production
This article's tone or style may not reflect the encyclopedic tone used on Wikipedia. (July 2020) |
Rolling Stones: Live at the Max was the first feature-length film ever to be filmed in IMAX format.
Imaging fed to the jumbotrons at concerts came from "bread trucks" switching live feeds from an army of video cameras. Midway through post, the request came to use some of this video that had been recorded on 3/4" tape in the final IMAX film. This began a crazy series of tests to improve and up-res this video to be shot on IMAX neg at the lens facility in Mississauga. Test neg was processed in New York, prints made, returned to Toronto for screening at the IMAX theater at Ontario Place. After many tries, a process was created to improve imaging enough to be used. Final release included approximately 6 minutes of this footage.
Originally shot with 8 IMAX cameras outfitted with the first long load film magazines, for 5 concerts in 3 cities. The magazines were so huge and the logistics of the loading so unpredictable, there was no guarantee of complete coverage of any song in any single concert. Eventually trying to cut this on a flatbed proved impossible. Recently re-released EditDroids were in Toronto on various projects and one was custom configured with the help of the folks at Lucas in Los Angeles. All 35mm "twist reduction" work print was reassembled in original rolls, transferred to video and recorded on one-off laser videodiscs. The 8-headed Droid could load all data bases and imaging for a single song in all concert locations. The editors could jump to any point in a song, see what was available (or not) then jump to the same spot in all subsequent concerts. The trick was tracing back from the Droid data through LaserDisc data through video data back to 35mm stepdown print edge code and ultimately to the original IMAX neg - frame accurately to produce the neg cut list that needed to sync with the original 64 track digital recordings.
Home video
VHS, DVD and Blu-ray versions were released under the title Rolling Stones: Live at the Max.
See also the live album Flashpoint, released in 1991, from the same tour.
Track listing
All songs by Mick Jagger and Keith Richards.
- "Continental Drift"
- "Start Me Up"
- "Sad Sad Sad"
- "Tumbling Dice"
- "Ruby Tuesday"
- "Rock and a Hard Place"
- "Honky Tonk Women"
- "You Can't Always Get What You Want"
- "Happy"
- "Paint It Black"
- "2000 Light Years from Home"
- "Sympathy for the Devil"
- "Street Fighting Man"
- "It's Only Rock 'n Roll (But I Like It)"
- "Brown Sugar"
- "(I Can't Get No) Satisfaction"
The list below reflects the sound recording dates. The video is a mix of the listed shows, plus footage from 29 July 1990.[4]
Song Title | Date Played | Venue |
---|---|---|
Continental Drift | ||
Start Me Up | 24 August 1990 | London, England |
Sad Sad Sad | 28 July 1990 | Turin, Italy |
Tumbling Dice | 24 August 1990 | London, England |
Ruby Tuesday | 25 August 1990 | London, England |
Rock and a Hard Place | 28 July 1990 | Turin, Italy |
Honky Tonk Women | 28 July 1990 | Turin, Italy |
You Can't Always Get What You Want | 25 August 1990 | London, England |
Happy | 14 August 1990 | East Berlin, German Dem. Rep. |
Paint It Black | 28 July 1990 | Turin, Italy |
2000 Light Years from Home | 28 July 1990 | Turin, Italy |
Sympathy for the Devil | 28 July or 24 August 1990 | Turin, Italy or London, England |
Street Fighting Man | 24 August 1990 | London, England |
It's Only Rock 'n Roll (But I Like It) | 14 August 1990 | East Berlin, German Dem. Rep. |
Brown Sugar | 25 August 1990 | London, England |
(I Can't Get No) Satisfaction | 13 August 1990[5] or 14 August 1990[6] | East Berlin, German Dem. Rep. or London, England |
Personnel
The Rolling Stones
- Mick Jagger – lead vocals, guitars, percussion
- Keith Richards – vocals, guitars
- Ronnie Wood – guitars
- Bill Wyman – bass guitar
- Charlie Watts – drums
Additional personnel
- Matt Clifford – keyboards, backing vocals, French horn, percussion
- Chuck Leavell – keyboards, backing vocals, percussion
- Bobby Keys – saxophone
- Horns by The Uptown Horns – Arno Hecht, Paul Litteral, Bob Funk, Crispen Cloe
- Bernard Fowler – backing vocals, percussion
- Sophia Jones – backing vocals
- Lorelei McBroom – backing vocals
References
- ^ "Feature films shot, released domestically in 70mm process". Daily Variety. May 21, 1992. p. 22.
- ^ http://rocksoff.org/1990b.htm
- ^ http://www.nzentgraf.de/books/tcw/works1.htm
- ^ http://www.nzentgraf.de/books/tcw/works1.htm
- ^ http://rocksoff.org/1990b.htm
- ^ http://www.nzentgraf.de/books/tcw/works1.htm
External links
- At the Max at IMDb