
Grateful Dead's San Francisco concert film hits IMAX theaters for band's 60th anniversary
In honor of the legendary Bay Area band's 60th anniversary, Rhino Entertainment and Trafalgar Releasing will release the newly remastered 1977 concert film 'The Grateful Dead Movie' in 60 IMAX theaters across the country.
The screenings are part of the Dead's annual 'Meet Up at the Movies,' an annual event where the band's concert films or videos are screened, and will hit select theaters on Aug. 13, followed by a wide release on Aug. 14. Tickets are on sale at meetupatthemovies.com.
Directed by Grateful Dead frontman Jerry Garcia and documentarian Leon Gast, the movie was filmed during a five-night run at San Francisco's Winterland Ballroom in October 1974, which at the time were thought to be the band's final performances. The Oct. 20, 1974, show was billed as 'The Last One.' The concerts featured the Dead's 'Wall of Sound,' the sound system that was designed specifically for the band and that redefined concert audio.
A favorite among Deadheads, 'The Grateful Dead Movie' also features interviews with band members and crew, a rare focus on the band's fans and even animation.
David Lemieux, the Grateful Dead archivist and legacy manager, said in a statement that after experiencing the film in IMAX, 'It was the greatest screening I've ever experienced of a film I've seen hundreds of times.'
Also included, after the film, is the theatrical premiere of 'China Cat Sunflower > I Know You Rider,' a bonus live performance from the Winterland shows not included in the official film release.
The 'Meet Up at the Movies' event follows a three-day concert at Golden Gate Park Aug. 1-3 that is expected to draw 60,000 fans per day. The performances, held at Polo Fields, will feature surviving members Bob Weir and Mickey Hart playing along with their band Dead & Company, which includes an ensemble of musician friends — guitarist John Mayer, bassist Oteil Burbridge, pianist Jeff Chimenti and drummer Jay Lane. Tickets are on sale at ticketmaster.com.
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Chicago Tribune
3 days ago
- Chicago Tribune
It's been 30 years since the Grateful Dead's final concerts at Soldier Field in Chicago
The longest, strangest trip embarked upon by a rock 'n' roll band ended 30 years ago this week at Soldier Field. On Sunday, July 9, 1995, the Grateful Dead played what would be its final concert with its full lineup at the stadium — the harmonious echoes of 'Box of Rain' concluding a fascinating musical journey that began in May 1965 at a small pizza parlor in California and encompassed more than 2,300 shows. Coming just before a stifling heat wave engulfed the city, the Grateful Dead's two-night lakefront stand remains memorable for many reasons — some better off forgotten. While the sextet rebounded from a Saturday production that witnessed lead singer Jerry Garcia forgetting lyrics, flubbing notes and demonstrating clear signs of ailing health, the uneven closing show concluded what's now known as the 'Tour from Hell' — a trek haunted by uninspired performances, gate-crashing incidents, weather-related injuries, death threats and deplorable behavior from some fans. Take it from someone who was there: It was a bad scene. An anomaly, really, in the Grateful Dead's local history. Though the band's newest archival trove — 'Enjoying the Ride,' a 60-disc box set themed around the group's ties to select venues — spotlights what was then Deer Creek Music Center in Noblesville, Indiana, and Alpine Valley Music Theatre in East Troy, Wisconsin, to represent the Midwest, the Dead made Chicago its go-to base in the heartland. Far surpassing the number of its respective appearances in Milwaukee, Minneapolis, Detroit, Indianapolis, Kansas City and St. Louis, the Grateful Dead played some 70 dates in the Chicago area. Not included in that tally: The regrouped collective's three 'Fare Thee Well' shows in July 2015 at Soldier Field. Clever marketing lingo aside, nothing disguises the fact that the band ceased when Garcia died of a heart attack shortly after turning 53 in August 1995. Here are 10 of the most significant visits from a band that looms perhaps even larger today than during its existence. More than three years after forming, the Grateful Dead arrived for its Chicago debut at a bygone Uptown venue that hosted legends such as Led Zeppelin and The Who before they became massive. Freshly discharged from the Air Force, keyboardist Tom Constanten officially joined the collective earlier in the week. The Grateful Dead is nascent enough that no definitive setlist information survives for either show. Reporting on the second night for the Tribune's youth music column, Robb Baker amusingly observed: 'They have no good vocalist; their material itself is not that memorable (you don't go around humming Dead tunes); and it takes them forever to really get warmed up.' Ultimately, he succumbed to the band's eclectic charms and gave it a rave. The Grateful Dead returned to the same location the following January and again that April. A portion of the latter visit is documented on 'Dick's Picks Volume 26.' Mirroring the right-into-the-fire experience of his predecessor, Constanten, whose brief tenure ended in early 1970, keyboardist Keith Godchaux had one show under his belt when the Grateful Dead arrived for its second of a career total of four residencies at Auditorium Theatre. He was tasked with spelling the playing of beloved original member Ron 'Pigpen' McKernan, on hiatus due to health problems that led to his death in early 1973. Adding to the pressure? The Grateful Dead premiered an array of new tunes ('Tennessee Jed,' 'Comes a Time,' 'Jack Straw,' 'Mexicali Blues' 'One More Saturday Night' among them). And Oak Park radio station WGLD-FM broadcasted night one, which contained the final performance of the obscure ditty 'The Frozen Logger.' Godchaux, who stayed with the Grateful Dead until 1979, passed his test. Both concerts sizzled. The first, which prompted the Chicago Sun-Times to predict 'a revival for dance halls' and Tribune critic Lynn Van Matre to deem the band 'relaxed, yet very much together,' featured a 'St. Stephen'-led encore. The second, chronicled on 'Dave's Picks Volume 3,' sparked with a transcendent 'That's It for the Other One' suite. No regional Grateful Dead show witnessed more back-and-forth planning drama than the band's sole Evanston date. Daily Northwestern archives show that attempts to book the group began in April 1970. Efforts to land the band for the university's 1973 homecoming unfolded over several months. Debates pitted organizers against administrators fearful of issues related to security, safety, cost and behavior by non-campus attendees. Despite opposition from the dean and contractual uncertainty that stretched into mid-October, the student government — with a big assist from Jam Productions — secured the artist it wanted. Northwestern students paid $4.50, one dollar less than the public. But more money than the estimated 50 to 100 people who gained entrance by buying discounted admission from entrepreneurial kids who found untorn tickets discarded under the bleachers by a careless Jam attendant and re-sold them outside. Inside, amid Halloween decor and a capacity crowd, the Grateful Dead played four hours despite guitarist-vocalist Bob Weir reportedly feeling under the weather. Part of the show can be heard on the two-disc 'Wake of the Flood' reissue. The Grateful Dead's second and final concert at the now-demolished Canaryville arena marked the only local appearance of the band's complete, near-mythical Wall of Sound. The subject of 'Loud and Clear,' a brand-new book by Chicago-based writer Brian Anderson, the pioneering sound reinforcement system became as famous for its spectacular fidelity as its immense size. Because the 75-ton array proved incredibly labor-intensive and expensive to schlep from show to show, the group retired it in October 1974. In addition to marking the group's last area gig for nearly two years, this excellent mid-summer performance remains noteworthy for a collaborative interlude between Grateful Dead bassist Phil Lesh and Ned Lagin. The electronic composer experimented with Lesh nearly two dozen times using the Wall of Sound and released his quadraphonic 'Seastones' album on the group's record label. Garcia, Weir, Lesh and percussionist Mickey Hart's afternoon appearance at Rambler Room — a hybrid cafeteria/gathering space in the now-razed Centennial Forum on Loyola University's Rogers Park campus — doesn't technically qualify as a Grateful Dead show. But few Chicago dates harbor more intrigue than this impromptu 'Bob Weir and Friends' gathering. Seated in front of a hand-drawn Hunger Week poster, the band members performed acoustically together for the first time since 1970. They dug into chestnuts — Jelly Roll Morton's 'Winin' Boy Blues,' the traditional 'Tom Dooley,' the Memphis Jug Band's 'K.C. Moan,' Weir's 'This Time Forever' — the Grateful Dead never before or again attempted in public. The first rendition of 'Knockin' on Heaven's Door,' a Bob Dylan number the full group wouldn't play until 1987, anchored the set. After finishing with a romp through Buddy Holly's 'Oh Boy!,' the quartet headed a couple miles south to Uptown Theatre for its second show of a three-night run. Though the Grateful Dead usually kicked off the year in California or on the East Coast, Chicago got the honor in 1981 when the group launched its spring jaunt at Uptown Theatre — an architectural gem that still sits, decaying, awaiting its second act. The three-night run marked the Grateful Dead's sixth and final hurrah at the movie palace, which closed its doors for good that December. (Jerry Garcia returned in June with his namesake band.) Due to an intimacy and acoustic signature that would cause the balcony to vibrate from certain frequencies, Uptown Theatre quickly became known among fans as a magical spot to see the group. The feeling seemed mutual. In the span of 37 months, the band headlined an astonishing 17 shows at Uptown Theatre, which hosted the Grateful Dead more times than any local venue. A-list examples of early '80s Grateful Dead, these shows should be short-listed for the band's ongoing archival series. Relatedly, the group's Dec. 3, 1979 date at Uptown Theatre comprises 'Dave's Picks Volume 31.' As the Grateful Dead waded into the mid-'80s, the odds of catching a truly great show declined. Garcia, his disheveled hair increasingly gray, ballooned in weight and often lost a beat. The band shunned the studio, releasing no original albums between 1980 and 1987. Yet the concert vibes remained healthy and the scene mellow, free of the toxic misconduct that violated the Deadheads' unspoken 'do no harm' ethic after the group's popularity exploded in the late '80s. Plus, the group still channeled bursts of imagination. This pair of dates represents the Grateful Dead's only appearance at a welcoming outdoor venue that ultimately gave way to a new, far inferior option 60 miles away in Tinley Park. Too bad. Once a favorite among tape traders, June 27 saw the band scamper through one of the first performances of 'Hell in a Bucket' and lock into a fervent 'Scarlet Begonias' into 'Fire on the Mountain' coupling. The next evening sounded nearly equally on point and culminated with the New Orleans staple 'Iko Iko' unveiled as an encore for one of just three occasions in the group's career. Given these concerts capped the Grateful Dead's stellar 1990 summer tour, a trek that piggybacked onto a spring trek that stands as one of the most acclaimed in the band's history, they should evoke only joyous memories. As delightful as the performances remain, they are overshadowed by the death of keyboardist Brent Mydland — whose drug overdose on July 26 permanently altered the trajectory of the band and sent Garcia into a dark spiral — and nightmarish management. Frustrated with limited road access into the venue and impassable traffic jams, fans parked their cars on the highway and walked the rest of the way. Commercial truck traffic ground to a halt. State police closed westbound lanes on I-80 from I-57 to Harlem Avenue, and ordered hundreds of vehicles towed. Unaccustomed to large concerts in their area — World Music Theatre opened that June — neighboring residents also complained about the alleged invasion of Deadheads who cleaned out stores of certain supplies and foodstuffs. Then, there were the insurmountable shortcomings of the venue that, in the words of renowned Grateful Dead sound engineer Dan Healy, constituted 'the most awful sounding place I've ever heard in my life — it's beyond my wildest imagination.' Suffice it to say the band wasn't asked back. The Grateful Dead collaborated onstage in the '90s with esteemed jazz saxophonists Branford Marsalis, Ornette Coleman and David Murray on the coasts, the same regions its brief 1987 trek with Bob Dylan unfolded. Local fans starved for a similar treat lucked out at the first of the band's two-night Soldier Field engagement when opener Steve Miller joined the ensemble for four songs in the second set and an electrifying encore of Them's 'Gloria.' Extending the bluesy motifs, Chicago-based harmonica virtuoso James Cotton also guested on the latter number as well as on a smoky version of Sonny Boy Williamson's 'Good Morning Little Schoolgirl' and charged take of Bobby Bland's 'Turn on Your Lovelight.' Such location-cognizant nods and unexpected twists — which extended to a blaring train whistle during the psychedelic 'Space' sequence — confirmed the Grateful Dead could still surprise and awe, even in stadium settings. The Grateful Dead commenced its spring 1993 outing with a radiant 'Here Comes Sunshine' and didn't look back until its second-to-last residency at Rosemont Horizon concluded a few nights later. Reinvigorated with a batch of promising new songs ('Liberty,' 'Days Between,' 'Lazy River Road,' 'Broken Arrow,' 'Eternity') and eager to refine recent material road-tested a year prior ('So Many Roads,' 'Wave to the Wind,' 'Way to Go Home'), the band strongly suggested it had more to offer in its fourth decade together. And yet, bittersweetly, Garcia's beautiful, gospel-etched timbre and choice of poignant material — a somber 'Knockin' on Heaven's Door,' a spiritual 'Standing on the Moon,' a symbolic cover of Dylan's 'It's All Over Now, Baby Blue' — indicated an acute awareness of endings and mortality. Both would wait. On March 10, the band stunned everyone with the rare, and final, 'Mind Left Body Jam.' At the finale, Chicago word-jazz poet and radio announcer Ken Nordine further shattered sensory perceptions by reciting 'Flibberty Jib' and 'The Island' during the 'Drums' into 'Space' improvisation. We never saw it coming. In other words, signature Grateful Dead. Then, and now, a band beyond description.
Yahoo
4 days ago
- Yahoo
The Odyssey's First Poster for Christopher Nolan Movie Revealed
In a surprising turn of events, upcoming directorial venture, , has received its first poster, despite still being more than a year away from its theatrical release. While Universal Pictures has yet to officially launch promotions for the film on the digital front, the physical campaign seems to have already taken flight, as per the pictures procured from several theaters. Several images, that have recently made their way onto the internet, indicate that the first official poster for 2026's The Odyssey is now out in the open. A plethora of cinema-goers, such as @Cart_Hound, took to X (formerly Twitter) to share a glimpse at the maiden one-sheet of Christopher Nolan's forthcoming film, reportedly put up at various AMC establishments. The Odyssey's debut poster highlights the film's title in a light blue font against a pitch black backdrop, with the phrase 'a film by Christopher Nolan' written above it. A disclaimer for how the movie was filmed appears beneath the title, reading, 'Shot entirely with IMAX film cameras.' Notably, this makes Nolan's 2026 epic the first feature film in Hollywood history to exclusively make use of IMAX cameras during filming. In addition to the aforementioned details, the poster also confirms that The Odyssey will premiere on the big screens on July 17, 2026. The release date accompanies a tagline that fittingly conveys the tone of the movie, reading, 'Defy the Gods.' Lastly, the poster features the decapitated head of statue of a Greek God, hinting at what fans can expect from the film. Helmed by Christopher Nolan, The Odyssey draws inspiration from Homer's ancient Greek epic poem of the same name. Aside from Matt Damon, who essays the titular role, the film also stars Tom Holland, Anne Hathaway, Zendaya, Lupita Nyong'o, Robert Pattinson, Charlize Theron, and Jon Bernthal, among others. Originally reported by Apoorv Rastogi on SuperHeroHype. The post The Odyssey's First Poster for Christopher Nolan Movie Revealed appeared first on - Movie Trailers, TV & Streaming News, and More.


Forbes
5 days ago
- Forbes
F1: The Movie Box Office Success Is Great For Apple And Cinema, Says Vue
F1: The movie was filmed for IMAX and uses a 1.90:1 aspect ratio for its entire runtime - and has ... More enjoyed the best opening weekend so far for an Apple Original movie released in theaters. As all F1 fans know, the start is all-important. Even for the driver in pole position, if they're slow off the mark as the lights go out, they could be beaten to the first corner, and instead of dominating, suddenly they are struggling to keep up. It's the same for movies. While there are exceptions, all too often, if things don't go to plan on the opening weekend, as far as the headlines go, its race is run, and the movie is deemed a flop. It's great news, then, that F1: The Movie has enjoyed a successful launch, taking $55m in the USA and Canada and over $140 million worldwide in its opening weekend. The movie was shot with IMAX digital cameras and presented in the IMAX 1.90:1 aspect ratio for its whole length, so it's no surprise that IMAX contributed $28 million of that opening figure, accounting for 19% of the total. This makes it the most successful global opening for an Apple-backed movie release so far, out-pacing Napoleon (2023) with $78.8 million and Killers of the Flower Moon (2023) with its $44 million (worldwide opening weekend). The success of F1: The Movie has delighted Eduardo Leal, the group regional director of screen content for Vue, who said in a statement, 'Grossing over $140 million worldwide, we expect the excitement to continue to build ahead of this weekend. The success of F1 is also incredibly exciting for the industry. We hope the success of F1 will encourage Apple to bring more of its films to cinemas in the future so that everyone has the opportunity to experience these amazing stories.' The critical word, though, here is 'hope'. While Netflix is renowned for its limited support for theatrical release, Amazon has expressed more commitment, and with the success of the movie, Leal is hoping Apple will be encouraged to do the same. Cinema is still struggling to get back to pre-pandemic levels, with the rise of streaming one of the key reasons for this. The big streaming players make movies not out of love for the theatrical experience but because they want to publicize the content for their streaming services. While they will not be averse to the movie, they have invested in taking money in the cinemas, it's not their primary concern. 'Subscriber acquisition and retention' is the mantra. And when Apple CEO Tim Cook told Variety in June regarding financing the movie, 'I don't have it in my mind that I'm going to sell more iPhones because of it,' one can't help but feel that's a little disingenuous. After all, iPhone 15 Pro components were used to construct a bespoke camera that was fitted to the cars, which could offer cinema-grade quality racing images while withstanding the forces of the cars being driven around the track. In addition, the Apple ProRes codec was used as its dynamic range gave the filmmakers the flexibility to color-grade the footage to match that captured from the main camera used, such as the Sony Venice 2. Whatever the motivations behind this movie, though, the immediate financial success of F1: The Movie will hopefully be taken as a positive so that the streaming giants are more likely to bring their original movies to the big screen first — where they belong.