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Festival

Play trailer Poster for Festival Released Oct 23, 1967 1h 20m Documentary Play Trailer Watchlist
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Before Woodstock, there was the Newport Folk Festival, which was established in 1959 as a counterpart to the local jazz festival. This documentary focuses on some of the festival's most memorable and influential years -- 1963 through 1966 -- and the footage captures performances from the likes of Joan Baez, Johnny Cash, Bob Dylan and Pete Seeger, among others. The artists also ruminate on the roots of their sound and the enduring appeal, and importance, of folk music.

Critics Reviews

View All (5) Critics Reviews
Roger Ebert Chicago Sun-Times It would have been easy to get cheap laughs by cutting from the traditional performers to the college kids, but Lerner went for depth instead. Rated: 3.5/4 Oct 18, 2008 Full Review Gene Youngblood Los Angeles Free Press Festival is a perfect example in my view, of one of the few types of cinema in which filmic technique validly takes a secondary position to literary-musical content. Feb 3, 2020 Full Review Dennis Schwartz Dennis Schwartz Movie Reviews A solid music documentary that covers in B/W the Newport Folk Song Festival during the years 1963 to 1966. Rated: B+ Jul 20, 2018 Full Review Austin Trunick Under the Radar Festival makes viewers feel as if they're casually attending the [Newport Folk Festival], exploring the grounds, discovering artists and dropping in on sets. Oct 18, 2017 Full Review Stuart Galbraith DVDTalk.com Rated: 4/5 Jan 7, 2008 Full Review Read all reviews

Audience Reviews

View All (4) audience reviews
N L The birth of the Counterculture Rated 5 out of 5 stars 06/11/23 Full Review s r A good documentary about the Newport Festival and its diverse participants, fans and musicians alike. A great time capsule. Rated 3 out of 5 stars 03/31/23 Full Review Audience Member mega insight into the folk and blues scene in the 60's. i especially enjoyed the part about the blues and the legend that is son house.... what a guitarist! Rated 3 out of 5 stars 02/14/23 Full Review Audience Member I haven't seen [i]Woodstock[/i] since some time in the early '90s, and I'm not sure I saw it all the way through then, so you will be spared tedious comparisons, though I could tedious-comparison away at the difference in musical styles, and I will note that this one is B&W, versus the bright, psychedelic colours (overlaid in mud) of the other. Both feature rain, too. And, um, I think we will leave comparisons there. After all, the point here is generally to see if movies stand on their own merits, and were I to do a compare/contrast, I really should have skipped ahead to "W" to get both movies at the same time, or Netflixed them, which is how I normally do compare/contrast reviews. While the Newport Folk Festival began in 1959 and continues (albeit in greatly-changed form) to this day, the film features performances from 1963-1965, including what Wikipedia confirms is an excerpt from the notorious Electric Dylan. It feels, in fact, as though there's at least a few seconds of everyone who's played the Festival ever, which is both the film's strength and its weakness. We don't really get enough of most of the performances to savour--and there are a few interview segments, which are good but which further shorten the time for [i]music[/i], surely the film's intended focus. Oh, the two little old ladies talking about how folk was probably the pop of its day are [i]adorable[/i], and there's definite thought provoked by the old bluesman talking about how if you can bounce to it, it ain't blues. Even the discussion with the kids about whether one can truly be a nonconformist is worth it. But, again, we are here for the music. Yeah, the bantering between Peter Yarrow and Joan Baez is entertaining, but they're both talented singers, and that's what I want from them. Indeed, I want more Baez than Yarrow--I know where to go to get Yarrow performances. (Though this is the only library DVD that features Peter, Paul, & Mary, oddly enough.) More than a minute of Odetta might have been nice. In fact, here's a Tedious [i]Woodstock[/i] Comparison--this film is 95 minutes long and covers the Festival's highlights over three years. [i]Woodstock[/i] lets itself spend 184 minutes to cover three [i]days[/i]. There's a lot that could be done here with more time, and I think that's the film's great failing. Even the stuff that you think is pretty cool feels superfluous, because there could have been something else in that spot. Look, I'm the sort of person with a collection of Baez records, and I'm 31 years old. I don't like Dylan, it's true, but whenever I find Peter, Paul, & Mary on PBS, I watch; I own the Christmas album and want the one where they team up with all sorts of other old hands from the folk days. I recognize all these names, or at least more of them than most other people my age. And, because of all that, I liked this film a great deal. Over on the Apollo Hoax board, we're discussing quintessential '60s movies, and I do believe that this is one of them. The problem is that it's not long enough, which, of course, is the opposite of the problem a lot of other movies have. I suppose documentaries, by their nature, are less likely to drag given added time. It is strange, though, that documentaries tend to be shorter than fictional movies. (With, as mentioned, the notable exception of [i]Woodstock[/i].) It is also generally true that the filmwork of documentaries tends to be less detailed, and that's true here, as well. Mostly, they just set up a camera at the front of the stage and let, say, Judy Collins sing. But what more do you need? Rated 4 out of 5 stars 02/12/23 Full Review Read all reviews
Festival

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Cast & Crew

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Movie Info

Synopsis Before Woodstock, there was the Newport Folk Festival, which was established in 1959 as a counterpart to the local jazz festival. This documentary focuses on some of the festival's most memorable and influential years -- 1963 through 1966 -- and the footage captures performances from the likes of Joan Baez, Johnny Cash, Bob Dylan and Pete Seeger, among others. The artists also ruminate on the roots of their sound and the enduring appeal, and importance, of folk music.
Director
Murray Lerner
Producer
Murray Lerner
Production Co
Patchke Productions
Genre
Documentary
Original Language
English
Release Date (Theaters)
Oct 23, 1967, Original
Release Date (DVD)
Jan 30, 2007
Runtime
1h 20m