Woodstock: Three Days That Defined a Generation (2019) Poster

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7/10
Freedom
ferguson-62 June 2019
Greetings again from the darkness. Michael Wadleigh's 1970 film WOODSTOCK won the Oscar for Best Documentary, feature. The assistant director on the film was a 27 year old budding filmmaker named Martin Scorsese (three years before MEAN STREETS). The footage of the iconic bands, the groovy clothes, the heavy rain, and the mounds of trash fascinated those of us who wanted a taste of what the "peace and love" culture was all about. Co-directors Barak Goodman and Jamila Ephron take a different approach in honor of the festival's 50th anniversary in this project for PBS' "American Experience".

Rather than focus on the extraordinary music, this film provides a glimpse into the arduous process of "how" to put on a huge event. Three years prior to the festival, a business meeting between four gentlemen: John Roberts, Joel Rosenman, Artie Kornfield and Michael Lang, began as a proposal to build a music studio in Woodstock, and instead evolved into a vision for an outdoor festival of music, art, and peace. This is the generation that fought in and protested the Vietnam War, saw their spokesperson Martin Luther King gun downed, and then had their savior Bobby Kennedy violently taken away. The youth of the counterculture were desperate for answers and hope.

Much of what we hear are recollections of those who were there. The memories and feelings of the time are presented as evidence of success. We also witness the behind-the-scenes obstacles and challenges faced by the event's promoters. All of this comes courtesy of some never-before-seen footage and photographs.

With construction having begun (stage, fencing, etc), the town of Wallkill, NY had second thoughts about having 50,000 hippies descend on their town. That's right. Initial estimates were off by about ten-fold to what actually happened. Five weeks prior to the festival, the town passed an ordinance prohibiting gatherings of more than 5000 people. This was a problem as acts were booked, tickets sold, and workers were being paid. Dairy farmer Max Yasgur offered up his 600 acre farm, and, frantically, the plan was revised and construction started anew. It was also very interesting to note that the word of the festival was spread through the alternative press. Of course, no social media existed at the time, so getting the word out to the country was especially challenging.

It can be argued whether the Woodstock festival held August 15-17, 1969 in Bethel, NY actually defined a generation, but there is no debating that pulling off such a peaceful event in the face of challenges like political backlash, bad weather, bad drugs, a food shortage, and a crush of humanity, was quite remarkable. No mention is made of the tragedy that unfolded a mere four months later at Altamont, but it's quite a contrast to the crowd control provided by Wavy Gravy of Hog Farm, the "freak out" tents for bad drug trips, and a community of citizens who emptied their pantries in order to provide food and beverage for thousands in need.

And yes ... we do get some samples of the music. We learn Richie Havens was the first act to go on stage simply because he was "there". He then proceeded to create his iconic "Freedom" spontaneously in front of the audience. Day 2 attendance jumped by at least 100,000 to experience Sly and the Family Stone, and of course, The Who. We get a glimpse of the first ever live show from Crosby, Stills and Nash, and hear farmer Max Yasgur's complimentary words to the crowd. Peace and Love indeed.
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8/10
Phenomenal Documentary about the Legendary Woodstock
juddbean-2255328 August 2019
Excellent documentary about the planning, prep, execution, and performances at Woodstock! Fantastic directing and editing of the film, which included a lot of incredible high-quality footage from 1969, plus, several terrific recent audio interviews from those who were related to the festival in some fashion. Highly recommended!
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8/10
Behind the Scenes of the most famous concert festival
jruddy4328 December 2019
Once the concert stuff starts - WOW. The footage is great. There are a few major artists that didn't get any coverage in this documentary. I wonder if that was a rights issue. That aside, the insider footage of this concert and the concert dwellers and the social and cultural impact it had is fascinating.
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10/10
Woodstock: behind the scenes
chong_an28 July 2019
I saw this on the big screen, as part of Toronto Hot Docs' Woodstock 50th anniversary series. It started before the concert idea even came about, showed the then-cultural situation in the U.S., and the scrambling just before and during the festival itself.

I was promised a behind-the-scenes documentary, and there was lots of it, with enough snippets of music for a nice diversion. By using archival footage and photographs, the director brilliantly avoided using talking heads. Given that everyone involved is now in their 70's, this allowed us to just see the young people of that time, freezing their images of a magical, if brief, period.
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10/10
an event of such beauty and magnitude could never happen again in these times...
olgayaleo72920 August 2019
What can i say? get your hankies out! this is my generation, and i am filled with pride and love! so glad this was made, so the enormity of what happened - what we were once capable of - can be shared with the world! and sly and wavy gravy and a bunch of these amazing souls are STILL out there, trying to create beauty, peace, and harmony in the world, though so many of us ignore or are not even aware of them...thank you for this gem - rock on.
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Iconic upstate NY music festival, it happened against all odds.
TxMike17 August 2019
I managed to catch this on PBS. A totally unique and absorbing presentation.

I was "of Woodstock age", but in 1969 I had just finished my Masters, was married with a child on the way, and was just starting my career with a job in S. Illinois. I knew about Woodstock but back then it was not my kind of thing, not a concert I would have ever gone to.

Now, 50 years later and my daughter about to turn 50, it is great to get a complete view of what it was all about. The organizers had no idea what they were getting into. They hoped for as many as 50,000, they got closer to a half million attendees. They lined up great musical performers, that part was done very well. But ...

Barely a month before the festival, with land leased and construction of the venue in progress, the local community hurriedly passed a law that essentially prohibited that type of festival. They scrambled and found a different, and much better, piece of land but really didn't have time to construct everything they needed, including fences, so ultimately it became a mostly free festival.

With roads clogged, military helicopters were put into service to bring in performers and certain supplies. Then there was the issue of toilets, water, and food, all deficient for the size of the crowd. Eventually the local residents and stores rustled up all the food they could and shared it all with the hippie crowd, reminiscent of the Biblical "loaves and fishes" story. With no other facilities available people slept on the ground or on a wall or in the rare car. At least one baby was born. No dead bodies were found when they cleaned up at the end.

In all a very peaceful three day music festival that went off mainly without a hitch, and that is truly a marvel. And a really good documentary, using original film and still photos, to tell the story.

Now I don't really know if I would have had fun in that environment but it sure is nice to see all those that did. Part of the people who went on to shape our world and today are in their 60s, 70s, and 80s.
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6/10
Hippie "Miracle"? Maybe because it didn't last
squawpony22 August 2019
Watching this you would have thought hippies invented the wheel. A concert with half a million people and the movies most important theme is no reported fights, calling it a "miracle" and therein lies the theme of this documentary. Granted, it couldn't happen today but these hippies grew up in a more moral time and began to throw off parts of that morality they didn't like, thinking just saying "peace and love" would make everyone love each other. And it sort of did for a weekend. (The current generation is evidence to the contrary and the former hippie generations had violent protests and the bombings of the Weather Underground, which morphed into climate strong-arm tactics and now Antifa to force us all to do it their way. So much for peace and luv.) But Woodstock: The logistics of this concert are something to behold and the kindness of the townspeople saved the day, frankly. Some voice-over alluded to the "loaves and fishes" to feed the masses and that is true. More focus on the music is what I was looking for and there wasn't a lot of video footage of that. But no one had a phone. Woodstock was one shining moment in the hippie movement and then it was gone.
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10/10
"Never before in my life did I feel so much anticipation." - Woodstock attendee Susie Kaufman
classicsoncall10 September 2019
Warning: Spoilers
I'll go out on a limb here and state that this PBS documentary might be even better than the 1970 film that focused to a large degree on the music and the bands that played the Woodstock Music and Arts Fair. The music in this documentary is almost secondary, there are brief clips of performers like Richie Havens, The Who, Joe Cocker and Jimi Hendrix, but the emphasis is on all the behind the scenes legwork that took place to bring the four day festival to fruition. I say four days, because even if it was billed as a three day event, it was on Monday morning that Sha Na Na, Paul Butterfield, and Hendrix wrapped things up to a miniscule crowd compared to the nearly half million throng that descended on the community of White Lake in the town of Bethel, New York in August of 1969.

I can't even imagine how much of this documentary was put together, as we hear the voices of long departed luminaries of the event, folks like financial backer John Roberts who passed in 2001, Max Yasgur who hosted the festival on his dairy farm and died only four years later, and Jerry Garcia of The Grateful Dead, who passed away in 1995. Somewhere in the archival vaults of music history, the reminiscences of these members of the Woodstock Generation put the viewer right in the middle of the chaos and disarray of the days leading up to the event, along with the overwhelming sense of peace, love and serenity that permeated the crowd as people gazed in wonder and lived in a city of four hundred thousand for a scant few days that would change lives forever.

I really can't say enough about this picture and the lasting legacy it provides for anyone who managed to be there in 1969, and for the millions who were born since who never got a chance to experience the spirit of Woodstock. And as odd as it might sound, it's not unlikely that one might shed a tear or two in wistful tribute for an event and time gone by that will probably never be duplicated again. The full title of this documentary is "Woodstock: Three Days That Defined a Generation". That it does, and you should see it.
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9/10
A Must Watch For All Those Who Are Interested in The Woodstock Music Festival
ArmandoManuelPereira29 February 2020
I wasn't sure if I would enjoy a documentary about the Woodstock Music Festival, that didn't actually focus on the music. But I enjoyed it a lot.

Though the focus of this documentary is on all that took place to bring the Festival into being, and the actual day to day crisises, and behind the scenes events, it is an indispensable watch for anyone interested in that momentous occasion.

It will assist you yo understand the magnitude and the sheer folly of it all. You will be amazed that they avoided a major disaster.
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9/10
Excellent
iwalrus22 June 2021
This movie gives an documentary type version insight of the era through first hand accounts and original footage of the concert and crowd.

The story leading up to the concert and what happened each day takes the viewer back to experience those times.

Compliments the original concert version and movie version of the events.
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1/10
Great until the last 8 minutes
roguegrafix20 November 2022
This was a great doco until they decided to politicize it. Why would they do that?music is supposed to bring us together but the producers try toto divide.

And to bring gun violence into this is absurd. Why not try with the Altamont concert when one guy tried to assassinate Mick Jagger with a gun!

This was an 8/10 doco until it breached everybody's sensibilities with this dumb-arsed move. It explains the problems leading up yo the concert and there after. Getting there by helicopter was always new. I'm born in 1965 but I remember the radio news describing the traffic jams getting to the concert.

Obviously they couldn't afford the rights to the music so you can't hear the songs they are talking about. Still a good movie before the last 8 minutes.

This was a great doco until they decided to politicize it. Why would they do that?music is supposed to bring us together but the producers try toto divide.

And to bring gun violence into this is absurd. Why not try with the Altamont concert when one guy tried to assassinate Mick Jagger with a gun!

This was an 8/10 doco until it breached everybody's sensibilities with this dumb-arsed move. It explains the problems leading up yo the concert and there after. Getting there by helicopter was always new. I'm born in 1965 but I remember the radio news describing the traffic jams getting to the concert.

Obviously they couldn't afford the rights to the music so you can't hear the songs they are talking about. Still a good movie before the last 8 minutes

This was a great doco until they decided to politicize it. Why would they do that?music is supposed to bring us together but the producers try toto divide.

And to bring gun violence into this is absurd. Why not try with the Altamont concert when one guy tried to assassinate Mick Jagger with a gun!

This was an 8/10 doco until it breached everybody's sensibilities with this dumb-arsed move. It explains the problems leading up yo the concert and there after. Getting there by helicopter was always new. I'm born in 1965 but I remember the radio news describing the traffic jams getting to the concert.

Obviously they couldn't afford the rights to the music so you can't hear the songs they are talking about. Still a good movie before the last 8 minutes.
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10/10
i was far too young
ops-525357 August 2019
But ive always wished i was there. therefore its good that there are people daring to make a good documentary about the august days of 1969 in bethel new york where love peace and music and hamp were joined together in a psychedelic climax of problem soluting, and where people were able to be human to other humans.

ive seen a lot of woodstock presentations earlier, have seen most of the concert film takes, and come to the conclusion that this was very well made.the grumpy old man is in the nostalgic corner so bare with me, the only thing missing is the lack of will to show the faces of the people narrating this film.
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8/10
Amazing concert footage
jesser29921 October 2019
I didn't realize I was a Woodstock fan until I saw this documentary on Netlflix. LOL. Everyone alive has heard about Woodstock, seen photos, etc. THIS documentary takes you inside with phenomenal concert footage? Why the '8' rating and not higher? It was a little slow to start. Stick with it and you won't be disappointed.
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8/10
Excellent doco - please watch it
bbewnylorac24 December 2019
Warning: Spoilers
I wasn't even born when Woodstock happened, but it's part of Western culture. Usually when it's referenced, we hear about Jimi Hendrix or Joe Cocker or any other of the big names who performed. Yes, in this doco we see grabs from many of the performers, but mostly it takes us far away and into the audience and next to the festival organisers and staff, relying on footage taken on the ground - at the festival's little markets, its food stands, the grass where people sat and the streets and fields that led into the festival. We hear from ordinary young women and men who came from all over America and even from France and Germany. It's an unashamedly reverent and non-cynical take on Woodstock. Its argument is that everyone had good intentions and it all went pretty well. That's a daring point of view in this suspicious era. You get a sense of what a massive risk the organisers took, and it almost turned into the biggest music festival disaster of all time because they didn't allow enough time to build it, and because the locals opposed the festival being held at the original site. But generous locals and sheer determination helped keep it running for three days, through rain, heat, copious drug use and 400,000 restless young people an very close proximity. The best thing about this doco is that I felt I actually learned all about Woodstock, rather than just hearing it referenced in passing, as we do these days. I learned so many new things. Watching the doco was like reading a comprehensive but entertaining book on the event. Anyone who wants to learn about Woodstock should watch this doco.
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9/10
For a moment there was peace, love and joy... a moment only
Wuchakk6 November 2019
Released 50 years after the event, "Woodstock: Three Days that Defined a Generation" documents the iconic concert that took place for 3.5 days in mid-August, 1969, at the height of the Vietnam fiasco and the counterculture movement. The initial estimates for attendance were up to 50,000 with later top guesstimates around 150,000. WAY more people came than expected and it was the biggest gathering of people in one place in history, over 400,000, only beat by the infamous Isle of Wight concert in England a year later.

The film shows the good and bad of the hippie culture, but mostly the good. Generally speaking, the movement was a reaction against the Vietnam war and the sterile legalism that America and similar countries had devolved into by the early-mid 60s. The youth wanted freedom, peace and love and you can see this in the flick. It was a good thing. Yet you can also see the bad, like acid trips. Both Janis Joplin and Jimi Hendrix appeared at Woodstock, but they'd be dead in a little over a year, both only 27 years-old. Jim Morrison & the Doors didn't play because they declined at the last moment and later regretted it. Jim died shortly after the other two, also only 27. Interestingly, Jethro Tull declined because Ian Anderson didn't like hippies and was concerned about things like inappropriate nudity (?!).

Nevertheless, Woodstock was an amazing event, never to be repeated. They tried at Altamont Speedway in California less than four months later, and also at Isle of Wight, but both festivals turned out badly and put the kibosh on the movement's noble ideals, even though it was pretty much inevitable since freedom without wise parameters naturally devolves into chaos and self-destruction.

Like the original 1970 documentary, this new version is fascinating and supremely entertaining, but it doesn't focus on the music as much. There are snippets of songs, but never full cuts. This version has more behind-the-scenes material, starting with the four minds that concocted the event: Michael Lang, Artie Kornfeld, Joel Rosenman and John P. Roberts. The latter two financed it. The original site for the event was Wallkill, New York. A mere five weeks before the concert town officials put the kibosh on it after much progress was made with construction for the grounds. Thankfully, Max Yasgur offered his dairy farm in Bethel to host the event, which is about 40 miles west of Wallkill.

A huge part of the appeal of both documentaries is the sheer magnitude of the experience and the corresponding entertaining escapades of the festival. This includes of course the footage of the people: the hippies who came, the masterminds, the workers, the artists and the adults who lived there and tried to help or make the best of it. A good example would be the skinny dipping or semi-skinny dipping. Although this may have been a cool experiment at the event it never caught-on in the culture at large. Why? Probably because few people want to see someone else's Mr. Johnson; and, unless a female has the body of a starlet, who wants to see it? (lol).

But what can explain the mass appeal of Woodstock? What made the hippies come out en masse? Was it just the music? In the 1970 film a guy who looked to be around 16-17 said it wasn't just the music for him. He & fellow hippies crawled out of the woodwork, so to speak, like zombies seeking some kind of solace, a sense of community, a reason to... live... and celebrate. And Woodstock met that need.

It's interesting how diversified the styles of music were and how non-heavy. Don't get me wrong, many of the performances are seriously energetic, but they're light compared to what rock/metal evolved into in the 70s to the present. There was acoustic folk, Caribbean, blues, rock, gospel, pop, 50s, Latin rock, jazz fusion and psychedelic rock.

What's amazing is how brief the classic hippie era was. It started around '65 and its apex was Woodstock in August '69, a mere four years later. From there it was all downhill with Altamont, Isle of Wight and the deaths of the movement's principal icons, not to mention the Manson murders a week before Woodstock.

Thankfully, we have the 1970 documentary and this new one to see the good aspects of the period; some bad, some eye-rolling, but mostly good, and all entertaining. Violence was non-existent. There were a couple of births counterbalanced by two deaths, one from drug overdose and the other a guy sleeping under a tractor who accidently got ran over (the driver obviously wasn't aware he was there).

The film was shot mostly in Bethel, New York, and runs 1 hour, 46 minutes.

GRADE: A
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10/10
Take in the experience as a whole.
Bernie44446 October 2023
Take in the experience as a whole.

There are a lot of commentaries on Woodstock. Some are more complete than others. Some with a slant or an ax to grind. This presentation celebrating the 50th anniversary of Woodstock, 1969 by American Experience is complete and neutral except for the title "Three Days that Defined a Generation." Instead of just focusing on a few main musical personalities, this presentation covers almost everything from the concept to the end. There are even a few excursions to the outermost fringes of the Woodstock location. We get first-hand commentaries from people who have been there and done that. Too bad they did not show the people speaking.

By the end of the presentation, you feel that you have been there.

Actually, I was stationed 52 miles up the Hudson and had an opportunity to go to the fringes. I missed all the good stuff. Drove to it in a car that is "unsafe at any speed" with paisley carpeting.

By the way, this did not define my generation.
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1/10
A Truly HORRIBLE Documentary
arfdawg-117 January 2020
Wow this is bad. Nothing new. Footage you've seen a million times. Interviews with people who have talked about this for decades. Slow moving with little actual music.

The entire thing really sucks. Find and watch the original movie
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8/10
Interesting But Could Have Been More
Hitchcoc13 June 2020
This supplements the original documentary with a substantial amount focusing on the pre-concert events. We got a nice look at the financial and social risks that led to the most famous music-fest ever. I wish there had been more music, but it still engaging. It was quite slow moving and that's what happens when there is so much secondary research. It was quite a time. All of my friends who said they went to it were lying but with nearly five hundred thousand who could tell.
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9/10
Got Wood/Film (Stock)?
kosmasp29 July 2023
No pun intended - I've never been to Woodstock and I am not sure it will ever live up to the mythological thing it became over the years. It's almost impossible to capture all that has been said about it - even for a movie/documentary like this. You get interviews of people attending and you get the musicians doing their thing. Seeing Hendrix (whom I've never seen (a)live, which also is true for everyone else on here) play the national anthem ... it really is something even in recorded form, I can only imagine what it would have been like to watch and listen to it live.

This is the bigger cut (close to 4 hours), but if you are really interested in the festival itself it may still not be enough to quench your thirst ... the legacy will live on and while nothing can come close to experience something yourself, this is as close as we'll get ... unless VR makes it able to ... well travel back in time of sorts ... and make it feel like we are there ... but until then, you have this right here to enjoy.
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Woodstock: Three Days That Defined a Generation (2019) - 6.9
Bonnell717 November 2019
Warning: Spoilers
Woodstock: Three Days That Defined a Generation (2019) - 6.9

Act 1 - 7.0

Act 2 - 6.7

Act 3 - 7.1

Music was an escape for the young people of this generation and a way to fight the establishment and they terrible things going on in the world at the time

Cultural war going on

Talked about the logistics as process and the people behind the creation of the festival

Wanted the festival to be a peaceful concert

Whole town taken over by event

Second half of film starts the first day of the the concert

Couldn't put up fences so they just let the concert be free as they couldn't collect the tickets

Get the whole picture as to everything that was happening at the festival besides the music, nice insight

Kept saying the same thing about the drugs over and over again which was annoying

Planners didn't have enough of anything from bathrooms to food to medical supplies

Flew in some helicopters with military doctors

The media made the festival out to be a disaster while it was going on

When they ran out of food the people who lived in the area starting donating food

Day three a huge storm hit but people made the best of it

Baffling amount of people there and thinned out on day 3 from the rain

Jimi's iconic national anthem on morning of day 4

The aftermath of the concert was a battleground of trash

People who attended the concert help clean up too

More than 350,000 people showed up

Max the owner of the farm was proud of the kids for sticking to world of music and peace

Helped change the world and truly defined a generation

Film was more about the logistics and background of the festival rather than the music itself
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