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Part III - Stones on Film, Revival, and Fans

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 August 2019

Victor Coelho
Affiliation:
Boston University
John Covach
Affiliation:
University of Rochester, New York
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Summary

Songs by the Rolling Stones are used in the soundtracks of so many contemporary film and television productions that any attempt to count them would be a fool’s errand. The group’s role as the stars or principal subjects of documentary films concerned with popular music and culture is far easier to chronicle, however, but no less instructive in terms of demonstrating the central influence of the Stones within the world of motion pictures. It is not an exaggeration to suggest the Rolling Stones represent the most documented musical group in the history of cinema. It is explained, in part, as the result of their unrivalled longevity, but equally for the timing of their emergence on the scene and the ease with which they both invited and adapted to the presence of cameras in their professional lives. Looking at Dominique Tarlé’s still-photography (1971) captured during the band’s exile in France and the recording of Exile on Main Street at Villa Nellcôte, alongside home footage from the period (now available within the Stones in Exile DVD, Stephen Kijak, USA, 2010), it becomes clear that the band was surrounded by motion picture cameras – those of professionals as well as their own – to an ubiquitous degree. Over the course of their career, the Rolling Stones embraced documentary film-making and the opportunities made available through increasingly sophisticated, progressively mobile, synchronized sound film technology in a manner rivalled by few, if any, of their contemporaries. Early on, they understood the power of the moving image and the degree to which it could both secure and perpetuate the mythology of the band, collaborating with a range of innovative filmmakers and artists whose approaches would facilitate such a project of self-creation. However, after public controversies, personal turmoil, and diminishing financial returns, the Rolling Stones would begin to exert an increasing amount of control over their cinematic representation, which results in work through the 1980s, 1990s and 2000s that rarely, if ever, demonstrates the innovation and intimacy for which the first decade of their documentary appearances is so celebrated.1

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2019

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References

Selected Filmography

Binder, Steve. 1964. T.A.M.I. Show. USA.Google Scholar
Whitehead, Peter. 1966. Charlie Is My Darling. UK/USA.Google Scholar
Whitehead, Peter. 1967. Tonite Let’s All Make Love in London. UK.Google Scholar
Godard, Jean-Luc. 1968. Sympathy for the Devil [One Plus One]. UK/FRA.Google Scholar
Woodhead, Leslie. 1969. The Stones in the Park. UK: Granada Television.Google Scholar
Maysles, Albert, David, , and Mitchell-Zwerin, Charlotte. 1970. Gimme Shelter. USA.Google Scholar
Frank, Robert. 1972. Cocksucker Blues. USA.Google Scholar
Binzer, Rollin. 1974. Ladies and Gentlemen: The Rolling Stones. USA.Google Scholar
Lenau Calmes, Lynn. 1981. Some Girls: Live in Texas ’78. USA.Google Scholar
Ashby, Hal. 1983. Let’s Spend the Night Together. USA.Google Scholar
Michaels, Lorne. 1989. 25 × 5: The Continuing Adventures of the Rolling Stones. USA.Google Scholar
Kroitor, Roman, and Archambault, Noel, Douglas, David, and Temple, Julien. 1991. Rolling Stones: Live at the Max. IRE/CAN/USA.Google Scholar
Gable, Jim. 1995. Stripped. USA.Google Scholar
Lindsay-Hogg, Michael. 1996. The Rolling Stones Rock and Roll Circus (1968). UK.Google Scholar
Scorsese, Martin. 2008. Shine A Light. USA.Google Scholar
Kijak, Stephen. 2010. Stones in Exile. USA.Google Scholar
Morgen, Brett. 2012. Crossfire Hurricane. USA.Google Scholar
Dugdale, Paul.Google Scholar
Dugdale, Paul. 2016. The Rolling Stones: Havana Moon. USAGoogle Scholar
Dugdale, Paul. 2017. Olé Olé Olé!: A Trip Across Latin America. USA.Google Scholar

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