SAVE $21.99 - Woodstock: 3 Days of Peace & Music Director's Cut (40th Anniversary Ultimate Collector's Edition and BD-Live) [Blu-ray] $47.99
Price: $69.98 Now: $47.99 You save: $21.99
Studio: Warner Home Video Release Date: 06/09/2009
Feature: This musical documentary covers the three-day 1969 music festival on the property of Max Yasger's farm that symbolized the late 1960s in terms of musical, social and political ideology of the era. American audiences are introduced to Ten Years After, featuring guitar great Alvin Lee. Jimi Hendix, The Who and Joe Cocker give riveting performances. As naked flower children romp, the New York freeway
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Last updated: December 15, 2009, 3:10 am
Woodstock: 3 Days of Peace & Music Director's Cut (40th Anniversary Ultimate Collector's Edition and BD-Live) [Blu-ray] Customer reviews:
Average Rating: 4.0 Total Reviews: 298
(Howard Lisnoff, 2009-12-12) I bought the 2009 anniversary cut of the movie after visiting Woodstock for the first time. I would like to compare it to the original film. A pretty good movie of a seminal Sixties' event.
(Eric Lim, 2009-12-08) Good DVD picture and audio transfer. However, content is similar to the earlier edition. If you want extra footage of this iconic concert, get the Blu-ray edition.
(David E. Miller, 2009-12-01) I bought this for a friend who was at the original Woodstock south at Yasgur's Farm. With the additional songs, DVD, etc., he is in pure heaven. I own the LP set but this is superb remastering, a thoughtful packaging and great liner notes/photos. A must for any true aficionado.
(Phillip Simpson, 2009-11-30) This is a great DVD, I own alot of Music Documentaires on DVD and this one is a great one to have. But just know that this is just the concert and there are no speical features in this at all. It might say there are but there are no interviews or anything. You think there would be more. But other than that it is a great concert. Wish I could of been there and it feels like you are in this DVD.
(dharmasurfer, 2009-11-30) This film doesn't have all the best songs by the performers at Woodstock, but what it does have far outweighs all that we've seen before. It's a real, organic telling of how Woodstock happened, gives a feeling of having been there as it morphed and progressed from an organized event to a gathering of the tribes into a nation, and doesn't gloss over the mud or freakouts, the logistic nightmares or any other problems. This is the closest thing I've seen to having been there and reliving the magical event.