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Leave your thoughts about Pink Floyd - Divided We Fall - The Wall: Live At Earl‘s Court.
| Chicago Sun-TimesRoger EbertThis isn't the most fun to listen to and some viewers don't find it to much fun to watch, but the 1982 film is without question the best of all serious fiction films devoted to rock. |
| Boston GlobeBruce McCabeThe film is explosively wild, raw, primitive, sometimes inarticulate. It is also totally theatrical and compelling. It's film as primal scream; seething with anger, alienation and despair. |
| Associated PressYardena ArarIt's a pretty grim portrait, but even worse it is often repetitive and boring. There are probably enough powerful segments for half a dozen or so outstanding rock videos but not a full-length feature. |
| Alternate EndingTim BraytonOne of the more exceptional, unprecedented films to ever come from Great Britain, a guttural howl of rage at the darkest aspects of English culture. |
| Capital Times (Madison, WI)Rob ThomasVisually stunning and disturbing, an essential midnight movie. |
| User ReviewJenna DThe pain, the torture, the suffering, the entrapment, the phobia, lust, love, hunger, war, starvation, loneliness, life, death, sin, infections of the poisons arising from the pits of humanity... built in a wall. Pink Floyd's masterpiece album could not practically be made any more accurately for the cinema as Alan Parker meticulously captured the album's nature of personal suffering expressionism set amongst an existential backdrop. Pink (Bob Geldof) is a young man warped by the many oppressions we all face individually, reflecting upon the reasoning for feeling the personal enslavement he feels. Stuck in front of a TV - a perfect allegory for ever-growing societal zombiism - Pink's mind remains in a state of mutilation, lacking progress and dwindling in thought. But it's not totally psychotic thought; these thoughts are familiar. Paranoid feelings. The anxiety caused by a cheating wife and the longing for the comfort of a mother; these thoughts are intertwined, as are many such bold concepts. There's an expression of evolution in here, making the film a modern prophecy 28 years after its release. It shows the fear in a young man of where people have come and where people are going; much of that fear today has been realized. But it also expresses how that evolution happens. "Empty Spaces" might be one of the most intriguing pieces of animation I've ever seen to exemplify these concepts. In the animation, a metaphorical mating of flowers, unconscious of their physical attraction and more prone to the instinct of seeding, warps into an ever-evolving evil that eventually grows into a flying dragon. The dragon flys away and the wall begins to construct, enclosing a sea of faceless society inside of it. General audiences may be afraid to explore this very personal film, but a respectful understanding of it will not inhibit the viewer as much as it will help the viewer regain a solid self-comprehension of subconscious feelings. I believe as a tool of such exploration this is one of the most important contributions to the cinematic archives, for without it we are given one film less that exemplifies bold truth. |
| User ReviewPatrick MPoor Roger Waters. The visuals may be amazing, but I have a hard time buying into the story. Your daddy died during a war. Boo hoo. The film keeps you outside the characters without ever letting you in. So I couldn't relate, and in the end I didn't care. |
| User ReviewAj VAwesome, amazing, spectacular film, I love it, it's like a feature film of a music video. If you like Pink Floyd or just music videos in general, you'll love this movie. |
| User ReviewChris OI'm definitely a Pink Floyd fan and so my rating is obviously skewed a bit, but only just a bit. The film itself is dark, cumbersome and will definitely get the mind going but also artsy in how it tries to convey itself. But the emotion and raw subject matter should still connect with even the mildest of Floyd fans. |
| User ReviewSerena GQuite possibly the greatest work of art of all time! Wonderful adaption of a spectacular album. A must see. |
Pink Floyd - Divided We Fall - The Wall: Live At Earl‘s Court