One of the great rock 'n' roll documentaries. Val Kilmer is astounding.
The Doors (1991)
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Reviews Counted:43
Fresh:24
Rotten:19
Average Rating:5.8/10
Runtime: 3 hrs 21 mins
Genre: Dramas
Synopsis: Covers the period from 1965-1971; Produced and released in 1991. Val Kilmer stars as Jim Morrison in Oliver Stone's electrifying profile of the Doors, which takes the group from its inception to... Covers the period from 1965-1971; Produced and released in 1991. Val Kilmer stars as Jim Morrison in Oliver Stone's electrifying profile of the Doors, which takes the group from its inception to its demise with the death of the "Lizard King" in a Paris hotel room in 1971. In the early days of the group's formation, Morrison is at his most benign; he's just a guy hanging out at the beach writing poetry. But soon the Doors' fame begins to spread--with Morrison as the focus of attention. Capable of an eerily correct vocal imitation of Morrison, Kilmer makes manifest the talent and charisma, as well as the confusion and despair, of the complex man who was the focal point of the group. As Morrisson's drug consumption and erratic behavior increase exponentially, the rest of the band--Ray Manzarek (Kyle McLachalan), John Densmore (Kevin Dillon), and Robby Krieger (Frank Whaley)--begins to grow tired of his late arrivals, the increasing number of cancellations, and the drunken recording sessions requiring infinite retakes. But no one can help Morrison as he spirals downward into an inferno of drugs, alcohol, public obscenity, and depression, bringing the music to an untimely close. Stone's intimate familiarity with SoCal in the 1960s provides the film with a high degree of surface verisimilitude, though the film is as much a tribute to the enduring power of the Doors' music as it is a cautionary tale about the perils of both celebrity and substance abuse. [More]
Starring: Val Kilmer, Meg Ryan, Kyle MacLachlan, Frank Whaley
Starring: Val Kilmer, Meg Ryan, Kyle MacLachlan, Frank Whaley, Michael Madsen, Billy Idol, Kathleen Quinlan, Kevin Dillon, Mimi Rogers, Michael Wincott
Director: Oliver Stone
Director: Oliver Stone
Screenwriter: Oliver Stone, Randall Jahnson
Producer: A. Kitman Ho, Bill Graham, Sasha Harari
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Reviews for The Doors
It is made by a Morrison groupie for other groupies, a film that leaves the rest of us locked outside wondering what the fuss is about.
A strong film from Oliver Stone that captures the stoned out thrill of truly groundbreaking music that provided the backbeat for a tumultuous time in American history.
I loved the film as a rockumentary, but the private life of Morrison is less interesting.
I can't recall a film that evokes the myth of the Sixties more potently.
Lumbers semi-coherently through Morrison’s life, touching only tangentially on those who were most important to him.
Ultimately, it's the music that tells you more about the nihilism of Jim Morrison than Oliver Stone ever could.
This contains career-best work from Val Kilmer as the self-involved, self-destructive Jim Morrison.
It seems more the glorification of an alcoholic jerk than a cautionary tale.
The film is an absurdity -- muddled, self-serious, alienating, a stone drag.
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April 05, 2006:
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