Shows the famed songwriter's performance and work off with reverance, and a faithfullness to the live experience.
Neil Young - Heart of Gold (2006)
Tomatometer
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Reviews Counted:95
Fresh:86
Rotten:9
Average Rating:8/10
Consensus: Proving that it’s neither better to burn out nor fade away, Neil Young: Heart of Gold works both as a concert film and a meditation on mortality.
Rated: PG [See Full Rating] for some drug-related lyrics.
Runtime: 1 hr 43 mins
Genre: Musical & Performing Arts
Theatrical Release:Feb 10, 2006 Limited
Box Office: $1,660,898
Synopsis: In March 2005, Neil Young was diagnosed with a brain aneurysm. Four days before he was scheduled for a lifesaving operation, he headed to Nashville, where he wrote and recorded the country folk... In March 2005, Neil Young was diagnosed with a brain aneurysm. Four days before he was scheduled for a lifesaving operation, he headed to Nashville, where he wrote and recorded the country folk album PRAIRIE WIND with old friends and family members. After the successful operation and recovery period, he returned to Nashville that August to play at the famed Ryman Auditorium, once again gathering together friends and family for this special performance. He also brought along Oscar-winning director Jonathan Demme, who in addition to making such hits as THE SILENCE OF THE LAMBS and PHILADELPHIA has made such successful concert films as STOP MAKING SENSE (with the Talking Heads) and STOREFRONT HITCHCOCK (with Robyn Hitchcock), as well as videos for the Pretenders and Bruce Springsteen. NEIL YOUNG: HEART OF GOLD begins with brief interviews with many of the participants, but then it's all about the music. Supported by his wife, Pegi, country star Emmylou Harris, the Nashville String Machine, the Memphis Horns, the Fisk University Jubilee Singers, and musicians Ben Keith, Spooner Oldham, Rick Rosas, Grant Boatwright, and others, Young leads an ever-changing collection of musicians through nine of the ten songs from the remarkable PRAIRIE WIND, an album that poignantly deals with love and loss, life and death. Young even gets reflective at the show, telling moving stories from his past in between playing guitar, harmonica, piano, and banjo. He also delights the crowd with a long set of encores of past acoustic hits, going through his vast repertoire to find memorable songs that examine life and death as well, including "The Needle and the Damage Done," "Old Man," "Comes a Time," and Ian Tyson's "Four Strong Winds." NEIL YOUNG: HEART OF GOLD is an extraordinary document of one of the world's greatest songwriters staring death in the face--and letting the music save him. [More]
Starring: Neil Young
Starring: Neil Young
Director: Jonathan Demme
Director: Jonathan Demme
Producer: Ilona Herzberg, Bernard Shakey
Composer: Neil Young
Studio: Paramount Classics
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Reviews for Neil Young - Heart of Gold
"Neil Young: Heart of Gold" is a beautiful film. It will be a delight to existing fans and will surely convert new ones.
All the apprehension and nostalgia in the music translates beautifully to the screen under Jonathan Demme’s direction.
Demme maintains visual interest by shuffling the stage positions of the musicians, and changing the lighting design for each song.
Neil Young: Heart of Gold, director Jonathan Demme's lovingly shot document of Young's August 2005 performances at the Ryman Auditorium in Nashville, has to rank among the most heartfelt concert films ever made.
Demme's camera gives us the best possible seats, seats that sometimes put us just a couple of inches from Young, and he makes sure Heart of Gold is a concert film that works both as a concert and a film.
Neil Young: Heart of Gold turns the traditional concert film into an exquisite, intimate experience.
Few artists are so adept at addressing the past and embracing the future all at once. And few recent films have so gracefully captured a musician at a specific point in his time.
The mesmerizing, heart-tugging concert film Heart of Gold confirms Neil Young's stature as a national treasure.
Demme continues to make concert films not because he's a fan, but because the concerts are inherantly cinematic and make perfect sense.
...The arrival of Neil Young: Heart of Gold should be an inspiration to music buffs and cinephiles alike.
One might call Neil Young: Heart of Gold soothing, even becalmed, but mellowness and ripeness, when they exist at this high level of craft, should have their season, too.
The best moments in the film are when Ellen Kuras’s camera just sits there taking in the whole stage, the whole gorgeous ecosystem.
Lets the music do the talking and that's great as far as I'm concerned: I love Young's sound.
Director Demme is smart and sensitive enough to sit back and listen to the music without attention-getting intrusions.
A gorgeous and often moving film that perfectly captures the essence of Neil Young's acoustic work.
This smart, aesthetically understated concert film from Jonathan Demme will transport Young's legions of baby boomer fans back to the future, as 1969 re-invents itself in 2005 for Young.
A work of dreamlike eloquence, that, like Young's music, is both spare and rich.
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