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Holistic Guidance - Joy Division (The Miriam Collection)

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List Price: $22.95
Our Price: $19.99
Your Save: $ 2.96 ( 13% )
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Manufacturer: The Weinstein Company Starring: Tony Wilson, Bernard Sumner, Peter Hook, Stephen Morris, Peter Saville Directed By: Grant Gee
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Average Customer Rating:     

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Audience Rating: R (Restricted) Binding: DVD Brand: JOY DIVISION (DVD MOVIE) EAN: 0796019810272 Format: Closed-captioned Label: The Weinstein Company Manufacturer: The Weinstein Company Number Of Items: 1 Publisher: The Weinstein Company Region Code: 1 Release Date: 2008-06-17 Running Time: 96 Studio: The Weinstein Company Theatrical Release Date: 2007
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Editorial Reviews:
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Joy Division is a "fascinating look at the brief but vital trajectory of a band that died with its troubled frontman, Ian Curtis" (Jason Gargano, Cincinnati CityBeat), only to be reborn as the equally influential New Order. Featuring interviews with all surviving band members, Joy Division explores the Manchester origins of this revolutionary act, their partnership with Factory Records founder Tony Wilson, and collaboration with legendary producer Martin Hannett.
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Spotlight customer reviews:
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Customer Rating:      Summary: A Great Comedy Comment: A bunch of guys from Manchester pretending they were the Doors.
Painful for anyone who isn't a fan.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Best Joy Division Film out of the Three Comment: Between "24 Hour Party People," Anton Corbijn's feature "Control," and Grant Gee's documentary "Joy Division," I think Gee's docu is the best. "24 Hour" sets the stage, delineating the context of Madchester in the early 80s and Tony Wilson's patronage as the Medici of the Northwest, discovering Joy Division/New Order. It's the most fun.
Grant Gee's "Joy Division" is informative and rich, with a lot more to give than the very limited feature "Control." The documentary focuses on outstanding faces, in crisp black and white, filtered through Final Cut Pro - it's a tasty, original and restrained blend of a music video and straight-up talking head interviews. As each new speaker is introduced, Gee brings up his or her face in soft focus behind their name-title. As the name fades from the screen and they begin to talk, the face snaps into focus.
The personalities are priceless - the surviving members of the band are honest and bare-faced, not "rockstar" at all, never mind that as the ultra-hip New Order they had the best-selling 12" single in history with "Blue Monday." They're fabulous to watch and listen to. The historic footage of Ian Curtis shows us his sculpted white-marble features, the full mouth of Michelangelo's David, punctuated by icy blue eyes - someone in the film says his eyes were "translucent." One in a million, that face.
Annik Honore, Ian Curtis's Belgian girlfriend, is articulate and open, glamorous and ethereally beautiful. If she broke up his marriage, one of the catalysts of Curtis's final breakdown, it's easy to understand her pull on him. Curtis's wife Deborah does not appear on screen, though her writing does.
Producer Martin Harnett, caricatured in "24 Hour Party People" by Andy Serkis (the voice of Gollum in "Lord of the Rings") as a nasty, portly drunk, is slender and wiry in the historic footage, very on. He was a co-developer of the AMS digital delay box, which he used for Joy Division's distinctive drum sound. It's not just the funky off-beats that the drummer employed - it's that instant spatial reverb SOUND that's such a sharp turn away from Punk. That's the real Harnett, not the cartoon version.
Peter Saville, Factory Records' graphic designer, looks more like a glamorous British actor than anyone has the right to, and has the resonant voice as well - his contribution was to put a brand-new graphical Modern look on what became Post Punk - a new direction just as the music took a new turn, evolving with Joy Division through New Order.
Saville's girlfriend at the time was Martha Ladly, the lanky blonde Canadian who was one of the two Marthas in Toronto's Martha and the Muffins. After leaving the Muffins and moving to England, she sang backup for the Associates on their masterpiece "Sulk" album. She appears in the Associates videos of the time, too, a foot taller than all the wee Scotsmen. It's her painting that Saville put on New Order's "1981 - Factus 8 - 1982" EP. Ladly was in charge of Peter Gabriel's groundbreaking Internet music efforts in the 1990s. Ian Curtis - New Order - Tony Wilson - Peter Saville - Martha Ladly: these people are gods.
Customer Rating:      Summary: what's needed Comment: attention,please.let's all agree this film is an important document and is certainly worth all the kind words offered so far.the next step is to urge the owner of the video of the plan k gig (mister nicholson of ikon&?)(the photographer,monsieur michel?)to release the entire concert on DVD for worldwide distribution.i'm sure questions of copyright and other legal niceties can certainly be surmounted.since a miniscule number of fans actually saw the lads in concert(and since the brussels one-off is possibly the only film extant other than the footage shot by mister boon)wouldn't it be great to have something everyone could appreciate for years to come-a consummately rocky band at the absolute top of its game at a prestige venue?
Customer Rating:      Summary: First-person accounts, Manchester scene & Annik!!! Comment: I was prompted to order this DVD after purchasing "Control". This is a first-hand account of what it was like to be in the band, what Manchester was like then, the psychological heritage, if you will, that made Joy Division what it was. There are interviews with all of the band members, Tony Wilson, Peter Saville and...ANNIK. Finally there she is and she is a sensitive, refined person who offers yet another angle on Joy Division and Ian Curtis. I wish Martin Hannett and Rob Gretton were still around to give their accounts. Actually, this documentary gives a fuller picture of all the players, not just of Ian, as it is customary in the JD mythification process. There are also several extra interviews and snippets that offer a lot more than a chronology of gigs and records. This documentary proves how much there is to Joy Division and how many more books and topics can be generated through the influence of this remarkable band. Martin Hannett deserves his own documentary, for one thing. This documentary offers "critical commentary" on the band, beyond just the customary awe. I have already watched it several times and I look forward to multiple (home) screenings.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Good documentary Comment: A coplete documentary of Joy Division. The style of the film evokes the stark industrial look of Peter Saville/Factory Records. A little too Ian Curtis-centric; I would like to have heard more from the other band members and those who were influenced by JD.
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