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Lightning in a Bottle (2004)
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Reviews Counted:60
Fresh:52
Rotten:8
Average Rating:7.4/10
Consensus: Lightning in a Bottle pays dazzling tribute to the blues by capturing its power and excitement through backstage interviews and performance footage.
Rated: PG-13 [See Full Rating] for brief strong language
Runtime: 1 hr 48 mins
Genre: Musical & Performing Arts
Theatrical Release:Oct 22, 2004 Limited
Box Office: $78,031
Synopsis: A slice of musical history was created on February 7th, 2003, when a dazzling array of blues artists gathered at New York City's Radio City Music Hall. With luminaries such as B.B. King, Solomon... A slice of musical history was created on February 7th, 2003, when a dazzling array of blues artists gathered at New York City's Radio City Music Hall. With luminaries such as B.B. King, Solomon Burke, Ruth Brown, Mavis Staples, Buddy Guy, and Dr. John among the lineup, this was always destined to be a night to remember. But the organizers were savvy enough to up the ante even further by integrating a comprehensive--albeit by their own admission, incomplete--history of the genre into the evening's festivities. Director Antoine Fuqua (KING ARTHUR) was there with a full crew to record the event, capturing moments of magic both on stage and behind the scenes for LIGHTNING IN A BOTTLE. Fuqua also splices in some of the archival footage that the organizers showed on the night, including many of the Radio City artists performing and speaking at a much younger age. The influence of the blues over popular music is vast, and so performers such as Aerosmith, Chuck D from Public Enemy, and David Johansen are brought on stage to vie with their counterparts from a more traditional strain of the genre. Poignant moments come thick and fast, with many of the musicians reminiscing about the old times, and realizing that this would probably be the last occasion on which they were all gathered in the same room. An inspiring historical document, Fuqua's film captures a dying breed of artists, but also points to their lasting legacy and influence which will indefinitely loom large over the music scene. [More]
Starring: B.B. King, Solomon Burke, Mavis Staples, Aerosmith
Starring: B.B. King, Solomon Burke, Mavis Staples, Aerosmith, Robert Cray, Ruth Brown, Dr. John, Buddy Guy
Director: Antoine Fuqua
Director: Antoine Fuqua
Producer: Margaret Bodde, Alex Gibney
Studio: Sony Pictures Classics
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Reviews for Lightning in a Bottle
The lack of history in this sometimes musically breathtaking film is disappointing and perplexing.
The massive stage at Radio City Music Hall doesn't lend itself easily to the intimate particulars of the blues.
With nearly every song being a classic, this would be a soundtrack for the ages. Blues aficionados won't want to miss this one.
This 'blues' film devotes more time to the music of Jimi Hendrix than to that of Robert Johnson or Muddy Waters...
Action director Antoine Fuqua's reverent but uninspired documentary preserves this once-in-a-lifetime combination of performances, many delivered by musicians whose age and infirmity are sadly evident.
If you know the blues, you've heard it all before. And if you don't, the film, after a promising step-by-step primer opening, won't help you.
Despite some iffy moments, Lighting is the closest one to get to the music from which, as Hubert Sumlin notes, 'there is no retiring. You stay with it until the end.'
Often seems like an overproduced variety show -- albeit one that can't help but burst its show-bizzy bonds into roaring paroxysms of pure musical emotion.
Gets its great groove from the humor and dignity of the true blues musicians it documents.
Mostly, director Antoine Fuqua's straightforward film gives the greats a chance to shine, and they deliver.
An aptly named blast from the past that manages to sizzle in the present.
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