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Neil Young: Heart of Gold

  • 2006
  • PG
  • 1h 43m
ÉVALUATION IMDb
7,7/10
3,4 k
MA NOTE
Neil Young in Neil Young: Heart of Gold (2006)
Theatrical Trailer from Paramount Classics
Liretrailer2 min 14 s
2 vidéos
33 photos
ConcertDocumentaryMusic

Concert filmé du chanteur de musique folk rock, Neil Young, donné en août 2005 à l'auditorium Ryman, à Nashville au Tenessee.Concert filmé du chanteur de musique folk rock, Neil Young, donné en août 2005 à l'auditorium Ryman, à Nashville au Tenessee.Concert filmé du chanteur de musique folk rock, Neil Young, donné en août 2005 à l'auditorium Ryman, à Nashville au Tenessee.

  • Director
    • Jonathan Demme
  • Stars
    • Neil Young
    • Emmylou Harris
    • Pegi Young
  • Voir l’information sur la production à IMDbPro
  • ÉVALUATION IMDb
    7,7/10
    3,4 k
    MA NOTE
    • Director
      • Jonathan Demme
    • Stars
      • Neil Young
      • Emmylou Harris
      • Pegi Young
    • 47Commentaires d'utilisateurs
    • 53Commentaires de critiques
    • 85Métascore
  • Voir l’information sur la production à IMDbPro
    • Prix
      • 1 victoire et 2 nominations au total

    Vidéos2

    Neil Young: Heart of Gold
    Trailer 2:14
    Neil Young: Heart of Gold
    Neil Young: Heart of Gold
    Trailer 2:03
    Neil Young: Heart of Gold
    Neil Young: Heart of Gold
    Trailer 2:03
    Neil Young: Heart of Gold

    Photos33

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    Rôles principaux19

    Modifier
    Neil Young
    Neil Young
    • Self
    Emmylou Harris
    Emmylou Harris
    • Self
    Pegi Young
    Pegi Young
    • Self
    Ben Keith
    • Self
    Spooner Oldham
    • Self
    Rick Rosas
    • Self
    Karl T. Himmel
    • Self
    • (as Karl Himmel)
    Chad Cromwell
    • Self
    Wayne Jackson
    • Self
    Grant Boatwright
    • Self
    Diana DeWitt
    • Self
    Gary W. Pigg
    • Self
    • (as Gary Pigg)
    Anthony Crawford
    Anthony Crawford
    • Self
    Tom McGinley
    • Self
    Jimmy Sharp
    • Self
    Clinton Gregory
    • Self
    Larry Cragg
    • Self
    The Fisk University Jubilee Singers
    • Themselves
    • (as Fisk University Jubilee Singers)
    • Director
      • Jonathan Demme
    • Tous les acteurs et membres de l'équipe
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Commentaires des utilisateurs47

    7,73.3K
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    Avis en vedette

    10roland-104

    Sublime concert film

    Neil Young turned 60 last year. It was not his easiest year. His father died, a man very dear to Young, the man who really started Young on his long musical career when he gave him an Arthur Godfrey ukulele when he was seven or so. To make a grievous year worse, Young was discovered to have a life threatening cerebral aneurysm and required two surgical procedures to correct it, operations that were sandwiched in between recording sessions for his newest album, "Prairie Wind." Nevertheless, he came back and, surrounded by his longtime favorite musician friends and others, gave a whale of a pair of concerts on August 18 and 19, 2005, at Nashville's fabled Ryman Auditorium, home to the Grand Ole Opry from 1943 to 1974. Jonathan Demme and a first rate camera crew shot the show, and this film is the result.

    Demme, better known to many for his narrative films, like "The Silence of the Lambs," "Philadelphia" and "Beloved," brings plenty of experience to making performance films as well. In 1984 he collaborated with David Byrne and Talking Heads to make the highly regarded concert film, "Stop Making Sense," and in 1998 he filmed a concert by Brit folk-soft rocker Robyn Hitchcock, "Storefront Hitchcock." He also filmed the late monologist Spalding Gray's "Swimming to Cambodia" in 1987, and has made short performance films and videos with Neil Young and Bruce Springsteen. "Heart of Gold" opens with brief, informal interview segments with several of the band members and a few glimpses of Nashville in the vicinity of The Ryman. Then we cut to the chase, the concert itself, which has two segments.

    In the first part, Young and his band perform all but one of the 10 numbers on the "Prairie Wind" album; after that, there's a series of Young's past hits. There's just one song written by somebody else, Young's fellow Canadian Ian Tyson's wistful 1963 ballad, "Four Strong Winds," which Young tells the audience was an inspiration to him when he was getting started in music at age 17 or so. The concert is beautiful in every respect. Young still can deliver in his distinctively soulful, mellow, plains roots manner, often shifting up an octave into falsetto, a trademark sound of his. The accompanying musical group and their arrangements are all marvelous.

    The cinematography, a team effort led by DP Ellen Kuras ("I Shot Andy Warhol," "Bamboozled," "Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind," "No Direction Home - Bob Dylan"), is sublime. Camera angles are imaginative; the shots are simple and held long, never distracting the viewer's attention from the musicians; and the focus is always on the stage, no swoopy audience shots are allowed. The editing, by Andy Keir ("Mandela," Beloved," "The Secret Lives of Dentists," "Off the Map") is just as it should be for a musical performance film: not a single song is interrupted even once. Stage backdrops in lovely colors - muted yellows and ochres – enhance the visual effects.

    The concert nicely balanced the new with the old in Young's music. If the fresh songs from "Prairie Wind" don't include any obvious blockbuster hits in the making, the uniform virtuosity with which they are written and delivered indicates that Young's talent is still very much intact. Before a song inspired by his 21 year old daughter, Young says he used to write numbers like this for women his own age when he was young, and "I've still got a few left in me." Maybe I'm starting a new genre now, though, one for "empty nester" songs, he goes on to say.

    Young doesn't shy away from nostalgia here. And why should he? At 60, a survivor of a bad year, with a wondrous songbook behind him, it is that time in life for anyone to begin to be reflective. He talks about his much used guitar, which he bought from Grant Boatwright years ago. It once belonged to Hank Williams, who played it on the Ryman stage in his last appearance there in 1951.

    For anyone whose formative or defining life experiences were, like mine, sometimes accompanied by Young's music – from his 1968 hit with Buffalo Springfield, "I Am a Child," and "Heart of Gold," in 1972, onward – this concert is sure to be emotionally compelling. For that matter, anyone who appreciates country-pop music, and the images of traditional Americana it evokes, cannot fail to find satisfaction watching this movie, satisfaction we also see in the faces of the players themselves, several of whom have worked with Young for 30 years or more, so glad to be back on stage with each other and with Young, their leader, feeling stronger again and healing.

    With Emmylou Harris (vocals, guitar), Ben Keith (band leader, steel guitar), Spooner Oldham (keyboards), Rick Rosas (bass), Grant Boatwright (guitar), Karl T. Himmel and Chad Cromwell (drums), Wayne Jackson of the Memphis Horns (trumpet), Neil's wife Pegi Young (vocals, guitar), Anthony Crawford (vocals, guitar), Diana Dewitt (vocals), Gary Pigg (vocals), Tom McGinley (tenor sax), Jimmy Sharp (guitar, vocals), Clinton Gregory (fiddle), Larry Cragg (guitar, banjo, trombone, fiddle, vocals, broom), the Fisk University Singers and The Nashville String Machine. My grade: A 10/10.
    JohnDeSando

    Concert gold.

    When Neil Young breaks from singing his own lyrical compositions in Neil Young: Heart of Gold to sing what he calls the most beautiful song ever composed, I knew exactly which Canadian piece it would be, for it was mine too. I listened as a young man to Ian Tyson's "Four Strong Winds" for an entire evening, over and over, as Young did emptying his pockets for a juke box at i6 years old in Calgary. Young had my heart for this performance and a lifetime.

    At this point in Jonathan Demme's two days of filming Young and friends at Nashville's Ryman Auditorium, weeks before his operation for a brain aneurysm, I also knew this was the best concert film I had seen in recent memory.

    Young's singing Tyson's song symbolized the real heart of gold he so obviously has calling someone else's work the best. In this film, however, no one could be better than Young. His voice seems to have lost none of its resonance and feeling since his searching for a heart of gold song made him almost iconic; his stories, such as one about his guitar coming from Hank Williams and then set to song in The Old Guitar, make the only bridges necessary among songs in a concert of songs. When he duets with Emmylou Harris on that song, her delivery seems consciously stoic in order to let Young's understated performance be the gold standard that night.

    Demme, who has successes with Stop Making Sense and Storefront Hitchcock, concentrates most of his shots on close-ups of Young, whose low-key style demands the audience get as close as possible. The backgrounds change on the theme of his new album, Prairie Wind, so that a new mural of the southwest is brought across as the songs change.

    Concert gold.
    10jeff-1334

    Worth the price of admission!

    I am a Neil Young fan for over 25 years. I love most of his work. I hate some of it. Neil likes to experiment. He is never afraid of failure. This boils down to 'You can't please everybody'. I have attended about 8 of his concerts plus his previous movie 'Rust Never Sleeps'. I took my son on his 20th birthday to the Cinerama Dome in Hollywood to see this movie. I also took my my wife, my 11 year-old daughter, and my son's 18 year-old girlfriend. Everyone of us loved the movie. The theatre was completely silent during the entire program. The lady next to me actually clapped after several songs. It was easy to forget we were at a movie. It felt so much like a live performance, except the acoustics were better and we could see every performer. Maybe I can identify with many of the songs he sang. My son has left home and come back. My father is in the early stages of 'Dementia'. This made the performance very personal for me. I had to remind myself that Neil was performing for millions of fans, not just myself. The movie is beautiful in its simplicity. It does not rely on sets or props or special effects. Just a bunch of very talented musicians. The lighting and camera work truly complete the mood. The day after we saw the movie, my 11 year-old daughter told me she understood the song Neil sang about his daughter. She understood the line 'I miss you, but I won't hold you down'. Yes, I loved this movie. I only wished I was at the Ryman during filming. Go see this movie. Take your wives, your kids, your friends, and anyone else you can think of.
    9NJtoTX

    Neil Young meets Stop Making Sense

    At South By Southwest today, I saw the excellent new Jonathan Demme film on Neil Young performing in Nashville, Neil Young: Heart of Gold. Good to see the Demme style applied to a great artist. Neil had just gotten over his aneurysm surgery and the loss of his father, so it was an emotional show. It's worth it to see it on the big screen.

    As in Stop Making Sense, there were no shots of the audience. When asked about that in Q & A, Demme said "If there isn't one thing up on stage more interesting than the audience, you shouldn't be up there performing." Piece of trivia: When Neil first became a rich hippie, he bought a large ranch that he still has. An old caretaker took him by Jeep around the property and they came to an overlook. The man asked "How can a young guy like you afford a place like this?" Neil wrote Old Man for him.
    9Temprock14

    Neil Fans Will Love It, Others May Be More Age-Related

    Hard for me to filter out my decades-long love for this man and his music from my comments.

    As a "Concert-Movie"--and I've seen most of them going back to the early 1970s-- it might be the best I have ever seen.

    I'm absolutely planning to see it again, maybe more than once. Demme's touch allowing the musicians/the music/the locale to tell the stories was masterful; I felt the editing might have been technically a bit choppy but as "grit/context" it was excellent (kind of "Last Waltz" like but a bit smoother).

    But the sub-text that will get to some but not all Neil Young fans (I feel all Neil fans will flat-out absolutely love this movie): this great great man and musician is clearly reflecting on his life in his music, in his banter and in his eyes.

    The aneurysm was an unbelievable muse, both in looking back and (hopefully,gently) looking forward. He like me (I'm about his age)--and this is why I suspect the degree of connection to this film might be somewhat related to age--knows most is behind, we hope there's still stuff ahead. This was in there somewhere in each of the film's songs.

    The close-ups of everyone are off-putting at first and then I came to treasure the "intimacy".

    And never before have I witnessed a film's content-- the great songs that made the final cut--so consistently compatible with this awesome "old man, taking a look at (his) life", surrounded by his "friends" (those that are left), in words, music and atmosphere.

    Music lovers: don't miss this movie. Great job by Mr. Demme!!!

    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      Grant Boatwright plays Neil's 1953 Les Paul during "No Wonder". This is the only song to feature an electric guitar in the film.
    • Gaffes
      Several times in the film and bonus material, Neil's Martin D-45 is referred as a "B-45" when subtitled.
    • Citations

      Neil Young: I got a beautiful young girl. She's just turned 21. She's going back for her last year of college pretty soon. She'd probably be embarrassed if I said anything more about her. You know how that is. You can't say much. Anyway, there was a time I used to write these songs for girls my own age. I got a few left in me. So, this is what you might call a, kind of a 'empty nester' song. It's a new genre. They might even have a new kind of radio station for 'em.

      [singing]

      Neil Young: When your summer days come tumbling down, And you find yourself alone, Then you can come back and be with me, Just close your eyes and I'll be there, Listen to the sound, Of this old heart beating for you, Yes I'd miss you, But I never want to hold you down, You might say I'm here for you...

    • Générique farfelu
      Closing dedication: for daddy
    • Connexions
      Featured in Cruising with Neil (2006)
    • Bandes originales
      The Painter
      Written by Neil Young

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    FAQ18

    • How long is Neil Young: Heart of Gold?Propulsé par Alexa

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 11 mai 2006 (Australia)
    • Pays d’origine
      • United States
    • Site officiel
      • Official site
    • Langue
      • English
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • Prairie Wind
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Ryman Auditorium - 116 5th Avenue N., Downtown, Nashville, Tennessee, États-Unis
    • sociétés de production
      • Clinica Estetico
      • Playtone
      • Shakey Pictures
    • Consultez plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Box-office

    Modifier
    • Brut – États-Unis et Canada
      • 1 904 606 $ US
    • Fin de semaine d'ouverture – États-Unis et Canada
      • 53 908 $ US
      • 12 févr. 2006
    • Brut – à l'échelle mondiale
      • 2 201 933 $ US
    Voir les informations détaillées sur le box-office sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      1 heure 43 minutes
    • Couleur
      • Color
    • Mixage
      • Dolby Digital
      • DTS
    • Rapport de forme
      • 1.85 : 1

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