
‘Roger Waters: The Wall' is an epic watch of powerful music
'Roger Waters: The Wall' sees the rock star explore his emotional nostalgia.
Music can be powerful. Incredibly powerful. It can agitate for social or political change, lament or celebrate love and speak for the collective. Other music speaks directly to the soul, the afraid in each of us, the trauma and the hurt. It can teach us lessons, inject new ideas, inspire and decelerate thoughts or speed up personal metamorphosis.
Such is the power of Pink Floyd's music. And it's been around 45 years since the band released The Wall, toured the album and produced the first cinematic incarnation of the music's narrative. Yet, it's as relevant today and inwardly touching as it was on the first day of release. And Apple TV's now put the Roger Waters 2014 epic live concert documentary on its menu. It is a must-watch, a must-collect. But it makes you wish that you were in the audience, then.
The film is long. It stretches over two hours with beautifully shot cinematic scenes of Waters on another kind of journey. While the music and the Alan Parker-directed 1982 film tells of the character's progressive journey as a reluctant rock star and the walls – demons he must manage inside – the clips spaced between the live performance tell a contra-narrative.
Waters explores his emotional nostalgia, in many ways quietly faces his own demons and traces the actual moments and people in his family, like his dad and grandfather, who lie at the base of the original music.
Biographical account of Waters' life
Roger Waters: The Wall, after all, is a biographic recount of Waters' life, his struggle with the death of his dad in the Second World War, and being bullied at school. It's a treatise to the mistrust of the State at a grand scale. The film is Nietzsche's existentialism coupled with Orwell's Animal Farm, along with a measure of emotional turbulence that can resonate with both the dark and lighter side of our inner selves.
Roger Waters: The Wall is in forward and reverse motion at the same time. And despite the long running time and numb-bum risk, it's an epic watch.
The show is a far cry from the Dome performance in South Africa during the same tour. Here, Waters was close to unplugged and intimate. On stage in the film, he conducts a larger-than-life audiovisual spectacular that showcases his showmanship.
Also Read: U2's 'How to Reassemble an Atomic Bomb' is a satisfying throwback
If you are a Pink Floyd fan and followed the angry split between Waters and the rest of the band – the copyright punch-ups and mutual dislike between the parties – this is the moment to forget about it and just immerse yourself in the music.
Drummer Nick Mason reunites with Waters in the film and, at the end, the pair answer questions from fans around the world. The two also spend some time talking and tracing nostalgia at earlier intervals. Last year David Gilmour joined Waters in celebrating the 45th anniversary of the album.
Best-selling double album of all time
The Wall remains the best-selling double album of all time with 30 million copies sold and ranks just behind the band's Dark Side of The Moon. The latter musical sortie holds the collective highest sales tally at 45 million copies. Another Brick In The Wall Part 2 – the anthem off The Wall – has been streamed well over a billion times.
The band's progressive rock is not for everyone, and is for everyone at the same time. Because the truths in the lyrics are not unlike our own prayers for emotional asylum. Roger Waters: The Wall brings it all full circle.
Of course, there are naysayers and when the film was first released it suffered some pretty nasty reviews from critics who relegated the entire effort to an ego trip. But when you watch the work and experience the music, it's easy to see the codswallop and ignorance of negative impressions.
To fully understand the show, audiences new to Pink Floyd or anyone who has not seen Bob Geldof as Pink in the original film, must watch it. It is a cinematic masterpiece of its time and a sensory ride unlike any other. From the Nazi references to the evils of conformity, war and inner conflict, The Wall was an explainer film like no other. Roger Waters: The Wall sees it coming full circle.
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Daily Maverick
18-06-2025
- Daily Maverick
Celebrating these local screenings of international documentary films — What's not to love?
For ten days the Encounters International South African Documentary Festival brings to Cape Town and Johannesburg audiences a major selection of documentary films from around the globe. Running from 19-29 June 2025, the programme reflects the issues of now, through a smorgasbord of films that will get your endorphins going. You may even fall in love. On the subject of love, let's talk about sex. Sex in books. Scandalous books by Edna O'Brien. Her first novel in 1960 was credited with breaking the silence on sexual matters and social issues during a repressive period in Ireland after the Second World War. The book was banned and denounced from the pulpit. The film, The Blue Road, captures how O'Brien makes her own way in the world towards a bold life. Love and war have been an odd pair since the phrase 'make love not war' was coined. This year, the 'war' films craftily look at what else happens during times of war. In Mr Nobody against Putin, a brave teacher ostensibly follows Putin's orders to re-educate Russian pupils about the war against Ukraine while putting his own life in danger. In Khartoum, refugees fleeing from Sudan reclaim their stories of survival through powerful reenactment and multimedia expression, and the war story is rendered an artistic story told through character on green screens. In Intercepted, the audience eavesdrops on calls from Russian soldiers made from the battlefields in Ukraine. And in Yalla Parkour, Gaza gets a different gaze, through the eyes of a young parkour athlete. In Abo Zaabal 89, a son revisits the emotional weight of his parents' resistance in Egypt and the scars left by state brutality and silence. This is creative storytelling at its best. The master crafter of documentaries, Wim Wenders, brings the monumental works of artist Anselm Kiefer to the 3-D screen in Anselm, allowing the viewers to be present in Kiefer's prodigious studio where the 80-year-old artist continues to create visceral works. Kiefer is one of the most important artists of the last 50 years, building and breaking concrete, burning straw and liquifying lead. Sometimes he uses lead for his book sculptures. Derived from his interests in mythology, history and knowledge, Kiefer often uses books as subject matter representing knowledge and learning. At least five of the programmed documentaries are about different ways of encountering learning and gaining knowledge: Mothers of Chibok; Fitting In; Shadow Scholars; Brief Tender Light; and How to Build a Library. Incidentally, O'Brien's last novel, Girl, was a fictional account of a victim of the 2014 Chibok kidnapping in Nigeria. The mothers in the titular Mothers of Chibok were shattered by the kidnapping of their daughters by Boko Haram, a group resolutely against western education, yet their determination to put their other children through school was not broken. These mothers are so steadfast about the importance of education as a possible escape from poverty, that they work almost unworkable fields with crude hand tools for cash to pay school fees. The layers of complexity for students to study outside their home countries is explored in Brief Tender Light. The filmmaker follows five students from different African countries while they study at MIT in the US (someone, please buy a ticket for President Trump — he may just learn a thing or two about foreign students at American universities.) Shadow Scholars turns on its head (please buy President Trump a ticket to this film too!) the awful trope of the 'stupid' African student and the 'bright' American student, with the laying open of an established business practice of unemployed graduates in Kenya writing papers, essays and dissertations for students at American universities. Yet, embedded in this thriving business, which sees the Kenyans receive a payment for their intellectual labour while the American students graduate with degrees not laboured for, are many layers of dishonesty, deceit and duplicitous ethics. How to Build a Library is a beautiful film, which positions the main Nairobi public library as a place for learning about the country's colonial past, while exploring new opportunities for Kenyan graduates on home soil. And closer to home is Fitting In, a year in the life of the House Committee at Eendrag, a men's residence at Stellenbosch University. How these young men deal with the past to forge a future for all, is a film worth seeing. Our collective future is dependent on climate change, how we understand it and what we do about it. Three exquisitely made films draw a line from the past to climate change now, to climate change in the far future. The Tree of Authenticity is poetically constructed around records of centuries of environmental destruction found in a research centre in the Congo Basin, letting the trees talk for themselves. In Yintah, which means 'territory', the battle is for the sprawling Wet'suwet'en territory — its land, forests and water — which has never been ceded by the indigenous people, against the Canadian government and fossil-fuel companies intent on building a pipeline across it. In Shifting Baselines, rendered in evocative black and white, Elon Musk's phallic 50-story rockets shoot up or explode. The only difference is where they leave their junk — in the surrounding environment, or in LEO (low Earth orbit) in the sky, beyond the clouds and further than the eye can see. What Musk is selling is a utopian lie of leaving all the mess behind, but the space junk is already in the sky. If your love is jazz, Misty: The Erroll Garner Story delivers a lyrical tribute to this self-taught jazz pianist, using a myriad of preserved archives and rare recordings. If history and photography is your love language, get your tickets for Sam Nzima: A Journey Through His Lens, about the impact of Nzima's 1976 image of Hector Pieterson on the world, and on Nzima's own life. In The Brink of Dreams, which won the Golden Eye prize for documentaries at the 2024 Cannes Film Festival, a group of Egyptian teenage girls tackle societal restrictions by taking their theatre troupe to the streets of the town. If for you love means standing up for your own power, don't miss Union, which in intimate cinema verité style follows an unlikely group of warehouse workers as they battle for recognition of their union by Amazon, in the face of the anti-union tactics of the behemoth and its baron boss, Jeff Bezos. From 19 to 29 June, Encounters Documentary Festival packs in 60 films over 10 days, but with one screening per film, tickets sell out fast. Get yours now and be part of the conversation. DM For a programme of films and screening dates, go here. Book tickets here. Participating screening venues: The Labia, Ster Kinekor V&A, Bertha Movie House, The Bioscope and Ster Kinekor Rosebank.


The Citizen
06-06-2025
- The Citizen
‘Touring South Africa is a dream': Calum Scott opens up about upcoming tour
'[My first tour to SA] made me feel special. That kind of moment is hard to forget.' Calum Scott is coming back to South Africa. The multi-platinum singer will return in January 2026 for three shows in Cape Town, Durban, and Pretoria as part of his Avenoir tour. It will be his third time visiting our shores, and he said South Africa makes him feel incredible special, just like his music has moved thousands of people around the world. The new album, also called Avenoir, is due in September, and is named after a word that means wishing memory could flow backwards. It promises to be personal, emotional and full of the kind of honesty fans have come to expect. This will be your third time performing in South Africa. What keeps bringing you back? On my first international visit for the Only Human tour, I remember my first stop in Durban and being blown away by the demand for tickets. It made me feel special. That kind of moment is hard to forget. Every time I've returned, the love has been the same. Touring is my favourite part of the job, and touring in South Africa is a dream. Touring SA is like a dream You've said 'Avenoir' is inspired by the idea of life being like rowing, always facing backward. Making this album was the first time I truly believed in myself as an artist. I've worked hard to get here, and I'm proud of that. Looking back at my ten-year career, all the twists and turns brought me to where I am now. I would not want to look ahead. It's the not knowing that makes life magical. Also Read: 'Roger Waters: The Wall' is an epic watch of powerful music Your music often explores regret, sorrow and undying love. Gone is one of the most thought-provoking songs I've written. It came from the realisation that our time is finite. In a session with Jon Maguire, I said, 'There will be a time when you hug your daughter, put her down, and never pick her up again.' It was sad, but as always, we found the hope in that and wrote about it. It's a reminder to live each day with love and laughter. Your music often becomes the soundtrack to big life moments. How does that feel? It's the highest honour I can imagine. When people tell me they used one of my songs at their wedding or to remember someone they lost, it makes me proud. There are millions of songs out there, and for someone to choose mine for something that personal means everything. Soundtrack to life's big moments How do you balance vulnerability with universality when writing? I've always seen vulnerability as universal. When I write honestly, I find that others connect with it too. Of course, I think about how much of myself to share, but I give a lot because I know that my vulnerability helps others. That is something I take seriously. What has changed most for you since 'Dancing On My Own'? My fashion sense. Did you see what I used to wear? Back then, I had just left a nine-to-five in Human Resources and was suddenly living my dream. I loved it, but I struggled with impostor syndrome until recently. Now, I feel more like myself than ever. If you had to go back on 'Britain's Got Talent' today… I couldn't do it. And I would not change anything about how I got here, but I'd much rather be a judge. I have experience now and, more importantly, I have empathy. Also, I know what it's like to stand there and risk everything for a dream. I think that's something valuable to offer. LGBTQ anthems and recognition 'Bridges' included LGBTQ anthems like 'Rise'. Does 'Avenoir' continue in that spirit? I'm proud to be recognised by the LGBTQ community, and it's important to me that people feel seen in my music. Avenoir touches on many themes, but emotion runs through it all. I love that people take my songs and make them their own, and I'm excited to see how this album resonates. How important is self-realisation for an artist? It has played a huge role in my growth. I still care as much as I did when I started, but I don't worry as much now, and that is freeing. It's taken ten years to believe in myself, but nothing worthwhile comes easy. Has success ever pulled you away from the storytelling you want to do? If anything, success gave me the confidence to stay true to it. It's hard when a song you believe in doesn't match the streams of your biggest hit, but that's part of it. Fans keep showing me that what I write matters, and that's what counts. Tickets are on sale through Webtickets and Breakout Events. NOW READ: A Million Ways To Die, NFOH reincarnated


The Citizen
06-06-2025
- The Citizen
Film extraordinary: Bono's Stories of Surrender
The narrative tracks the formation of the band, many of the songs, and what lies beneath. Stories of Surrender is personal and for everyone at the same time. Picture Supplied It's a film that ends on a high. A kind of unexpected high that's heavy and light at the same time, but biographical in its totality of moment. Bono's Stories of Surrender, now on Apple TV, ends with an incredible rendition, in full tenor armour, with Torna A Surriento or Take Me To Sorrento. It was one of his father's favourite songs. A vocal tour de force for the U2 frontman. Stories of Surrender was released at the end of May. It's a monochrome ninety-something minute epic based on Bono's one-man theatre performances after publishing his biography of the same name. If you have read the book, you will appreciate the show immensely. Even if you haven't, it's still a fantastic watch, if for nothing else than the star's showmanship. It's the theatre of the one-man show, brought to life in a style not dissimilar to Rattle and Hum of the late eighties. It's storytelling about the ghosts of life stages past, present and hints of a future. It's about how love and justice drove a man to be loud about his convictions. Father and son, mother and son. Facing the possibility of death when his heart nearly failed in 2016. It's storytelling, it's struggle, it's humble In between, Bono's struggle with God, religion, his need to banish his ego and be one of us, ordinary folk. And then, there was the band. There is the band. Where is the band? Larry Mullen Jr., Adam Clayton and The Edge are not there. His dad is not there. Mom, Iris, is a central character who shaped his adulthood in her absence. A harp and a few other strings accompany Bono's tuneful breaks between conversation with the audience. Empty chairs are arranged and rearranged to illustrate the ghosts, the souls that have and continue to impact his life. The simplicity of it all, in black and white, is engaging to the very end. It's theatre that holds a shotgun of emotion, relevant to all of us. The narrative tracks the formation of the band, many of the songs, and what lies beneath. The singer called himself a 'fucking idiot' in the early days of U2, particularly at the time of writing I Will Follow, the anthemic opening track of their debut Boy. He tells of taking The Edge's guitar and how he started making 'drill-like' sounds. The Edge responded, encouraging him despite not being sure whether he liked it. Bono handed back the guitar, and The Edge turned the riff into what we know today. It's a moment in time that defined a band that can argue, fight, and create, but always together. Bono is one of four Bono called the show a Quarterman performance because he is one of four. And nothing without his comrades. Also Read: U2's 'How to Reassemble an Atomic Bomb' is a satisfying throwback Manager Paul McGuinness, now retired, was credited as the glue that held them all together. Bono tells of their first breakup after Boy and their brushes with fundamentalist Christianity. He credits the love of his life, Alison Hewson, nee Stewart, as the woman who co-wrote his story. Later, the singer, fully shed of his Achtung Baby Macphisto persona, now only a man in reflection, confesses. He places his ego in the dock and asks himself whether his crusade to save the world was simply a child-like desire to be the centre of attention, or real? Surrender, also on the band's debut album, was the first song that Bono wrote at 18. It was the track that entrenched the somewhat angst, somewhat in love, somewhat seeking internal and external justice feel of the band's entire career. Not haunting, exactly, more like loitering in the back of his head, still muttering wisdom wrapped in sarcasm of Bobo's da' Bob Hewson. Like most sons since time began, Bono had a thing about wanting his dad to get him, to understand him and to be proud of him. And when he didn't, he turned up the volume. That need for approval, that ache, became the amplifier for the life he built, said Bono. The influence of Da' The story of Bob Hewson, inside the story, settles into the worn armchairs of Finnegan's Pub in Dublin, the Sorrento lounge to be precise. This was where father and son would share space more than conversation. He shares anecdotes from Pavarotti to his dad meeting Princess Diana and how, when Pride was released, Bob Hewson admitted to 'feeling some'. Stories of Surrender isn't just about a band, a singer, and his story. It's in a way, all our stories. And it's fantastically woven together as a work where one man exposes himself, and we can all hide behind his narrative. It's learning that other people are the giants on whose shoulders we rise and stand. And reach for the stars. It's a film where moments of surrender can resonate loudly, to the point of your own tears. ALSO READ: The Spikes and Bondage that set rock free