Taking Woodstock Movie Review
Taking Woodstock Review
"Taking Woodstock" Overview

Rating: 15
2009
Cast and Crew
Director : Ang LeeProducer : Ang Lee, James Schamus
Screenwiter : James Schamus
Starring : Demetri Martin,Imelda Staunton,Henry Goodman,Jonathan Groff,Mamie Gummer,Emile Hirsch,Liev Schreiber,Eugene Levy,Jeffrey Dean Morgan,Dan Fogler,Paul Dano,Kelli Garner
Lively and entertaining, this colourful film recounts the backstage story of
the community that inadvertently hosted the 1969 Woodstock music festival. It
has some great moments along the way, but as a whole never quite comes together.
Elliot (Martin) leaves New York City to go upstate to help his stubborn parents
(Staunton and Goodman) keep their hotel in business. Then he hears that a
friend from the city, Michael (Groff), is having trouble getting a permit for
his music festival. Elliot happens to already have one in hand, so puts Michael
in contact with a local farmer (Levy). And as he helps Michael make the
arrangements, he never grasps quite how massive this event is going to be. But
then no one did.
Lee is a superb director, and finds something resonant in every scene, drawing
out telling details in relationships and situations while letting the actors
create characters that continually surprise us, even though the size of the
ensemble makes it difficult to get too far from stereotypes. In this sense,
Staunton gets the least satisfying role as the narrow-minded shrew, while
Martin is stuck with the nice-but-dull guy at the centre of the storm
discovering who he really is and where he belongs.
Along the way, other actors get a chance to shine, including Hirsch as a
shell-shocked friend just back from Vietnam, Gummer as Michael's free-thinking
sidekick, Schreiber as a cross-dressing ex-Marine, and Dano and Garner as
hippies who take Elliot on a mind-bending trip in their VW bus. The script is
packed with snappy one-liners and witty characters, and it also has a nice
structure that builds slowly to the enormous event. Although the pace is
somewhat draggy and unfocussed.
Mixing real footage with some genuinely eye-popping recreations, Lee recreates
both the groovy vibe and the sense that hundreds of thousands of people are
swarming onto these fields. But the mass spectacle and the small story of
Elliot's personal journey are at odds with each other, and neither one is very
rewarding as a result. We wish we could feel the breakthrough Elliot
experiences. But even more, we wish we could watch the performers on the stage.
But then we have Michael Wadleigh's seminal 1970 doc for that.
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Review by Rich Cline
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