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Lou Reed's Berlin

Lou Reed's Berlin (2008)

September. 29,2008
|
7.3
|
PG-13
| Documentary Music

Lou Reed recorded the album Berlin in 1973. It was a commercial failure. Over the next 33 years, he never performed the album live. For five nights in December 2006 at St. Ann's Warehouse Brooklyn, Lou Reed performed his masterwork about love's dark sisters: jealousy, rage and loss.

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Reviews

Smartorhypo
2008/09/29

Highly Overrated But Still Good

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Neive Bellamy
2008/09/30

Excellent and certainly provocative... If nothing else, the film is a real conversation starter.

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Jenni Devyn
2008/10/01

Worth seeing just to witness how winsome it is.

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Scarlet
2008/10/02

The film never slows down or bores, plunging from one harrowing sequence to the next.

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william-t-archer
2008/10/03

Julian Schnabel might have been the most annoying New York artist of the Eighties, but he has really blossomed as a movie director. Concert films don't usually show much visual style, but here Schnabel has worked out a distinctive look for the movie that is entrancing without ever being intrusive or flashy-for-the-sake-of-flashiness. Of course, it helps that he's got a great series of songs to film: the Berlin album is one of those rock masterpieces that has grown over time, and it's almost reassuring to know that it was trashed by critics when it came out, since Lou Reed is so clearly having the last laugh on them now. Reed, as it turns out, has become an even more compelling camera subject than when he was young and a little too pretty for his own good. Here, he looks both ravaged and utterly determined to give every song his absolute best. It's bracing to see an artist who has sometimes thrown his talent away for the sake of looking cool now grab hold of the best he's got with such energy and devotion. There's weariness in his face, but no defeat, and Berlin's relentlessly downbeat lyrics remind us that, at its best, great rock music has always had the ability to take our losses and pain and make something beautiful out of them, without sugar-coating them with sentimentality or fake uplift.

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esmereldaster
2008/10/04

I wish I could give more than 10! I can't understand why anyone says that Lou Reed is an "indifferent performer". It is his laid-back, laconic style, whilst delivering lyrics of such power and dark energy that makes him the genius he is. I loved this film and was particularly moved by Antony's beautiful and original "Candy Says".... Schnabel and Reed made the perfect film partnership.Everything Reed has done, from his early days with the V.U., is brilliant, and what I admire particularly is the huge variation in genre, in both the music and the content of his songs. There is the less well know album in homage to Warhol, for instance, not often mentioned, but containing some wonderful lyrics and also collaborating with the great John Kale. Reed is God.

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film_riot
2008/10/05

„Lou Reed's Berlin", directed by Julian Schnabel, only shows the concert, filmed on five different evenings in St. Ann's Warehouse in Brooklyn, New York. There are no interviews or anything, just some text at the beginning of the movie informs the audience about the basic facts for "Berlin", Lou Reed's 1973 album, that is a prime example for misunderstood artistic intention. It was neither a commercial nor a critical success. Over the years, of course, things have changed and today "Berlin" is seen for what it is: A classic album with very dark atmosphere. Lola Schnabel, Julian's daughter, filmed abstract visuals fitting to the song lyrics (with Emmanuelle Seigner). These visuals are kept much brighter, also as a contradiction to the dark lyrics. Julian Schnabel leaves out the concert audience nearly completely and lets the camera concentrate on faces and hands on stage. If you like the film, you will like it for the music, as I did. The band obviously has fun playing together, Antony Hegarty has some perfect moments. A concert movie, amazing to relax.

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michal-94
2008/10/06

Lou Reed's brilliant musicianship and Schnabel's deft hand at directing combined with gorgeous rich sound makes this the finest rock and roll concert movie of my life. The huge band, including choir, back up singers, horns and strings held down by the greatest rhythm section ever were filmed and recorded such that Lou Reed's stellar performance and incredible poetry were allowed to shine in all their unique genius. Lou's vocal performance was brilliant in its execution and in the recording. His back up musicians were outstanding. The solo's, including the vocal solos, were delightful in their musicality and originality. Schnabel's sets and the his daughter's performance enhanced the visual pleasure created through simple unaffected camera work superbly shot and edited. Ask me if I liked it.

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