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  • Woodstock: 3 Days of Peace & Music Director's Cut (40th Anniversary Ultimate Collector's Edition and BD-Live with Amazon Exclusi
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Buy from Amazon $129.99$3.25 $150.00 $100.00 $50.00 Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Jan Feb Mar Apr May 2016 $129.99, Jun 13 - Jun 17$12.33, Jun 13 12:58 pm$129.99, Jun 13 - Jun 17$37.50, Jun 15 11:07 am$129.99, Jun 13 - Jun 17$35.00, Jun 17 8:25 am$127.99, Jun 19 - Jul 31$5.00, Jun 19 6:39 am$127.99, Jun 19 - Jul 31$3.25, Jun 21 5:12 am$127.99, Jun 19 - Jul 31$35.00, Jun 23 - Jun 29$127.99, Jun 19 - Jul 31$29.98, Jul 1 4:01 am$127.99, Jun 19 - Jul 31$12.50, Jul 3 7:37 am$127.99, Jun 19 - Jul 31$29.98, Jul 5 - Jul 24$125.99, Aug 2 - Aug 6$29.98, Jul 5 - Jul 24$119.99, Aug 7 - Oct 5$29.98, Jul 5 - Jul 24$99.99, Oct 7 - Dec 8$29.98, Jul 5 - Jul 24$99.99, Oct 7 - Dec 8$19.99, Nov 12 7:09 pm$89.95, Jan 13 - Jan 21$19.99, Nov 12 7:09 pmOOS $89.95, Jan 23 11:32 pm$19.99, Nov 12 7:09 pm$89.95, Jan 26 - Feb 19$19.99, Nov 12 7:09 pm$89.00, Feb 21 - Mar 31$19.99, Nov 12 7:09 pm$89.00, Feb 21 - Mar 31$69.95, Mar 25 - Apr 23OOS $89.00, Apr 11 11:36 pm$69.95, Mar 25 - Apr 23$89.00, Apr 17 - Apr 23$69.95, Mar 25 - Apr 23 26,278127,343 140,625 109,375 78,125 46,875 15,625 Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Jan Feb Mar Apr May 2016

Price Details

3rd Party New

Latest $89.00 1 day ago
Highest $129.99 Jun 13, '15
Lowest $89.00 Apr 17, '16
Average $89.00 (30d avg)
$89.28 (90d avg)
$94.02 (180d avg)
$105.33 (Lifetime average)
Added Jun 13, 2015

3rd Party Used

Latest $69.95 1 day ago
Highest $69.95 Mar 25, '16
Lowest $3.25 Jun 21, '15
Average $69.95 (30d avg)
$69.95 (90d avg)
$29.00 (180d avg)
$29.13 (Lifetime average)
Added Jun 13, 2015

Sales Rank

30 day average: 102,027
90 day average: 106,795

Product Description

This director's cut of , released to coincide with the 40th anniversary of that legendary concert event, has to be one of the most impressive Blu-ray releases of 2009 or any other year--and that's even before you put the discs in your player. The box is designed to resemble a faux fringe jacket (with an iron-on patch attached), and inside are all manner of shiny bells and whistles, including a lucite paperweight with images from the event, a reprint of 's original festival feature, and reproductions of various Woodstock memorabilia, right down to notes left by concertgoers ("Please meet me in front of stage. I have your insulin pills") and a three-day ticket to the event. And hey, if you're looking for subtitles in Finnish, Thai, or Polish, you've come to the right place.The movie itself now weighs in at nearly four hours long, and is presumably the way director Michael Wadleigh wanted it in the first place. The Blu-ray transfer is definitely an upgrade, as is the soundtrack, which was originally recorded on 8-track tape under less-than-ideal conditions. (Using modern digital technology, audio engineer Eddie Kramer, who was hunkered down in what passed for a recording booth at the Woodstock site, has painstakingly restored the soundtrack--even bringing in some of the musicians to re-play their original parts, as on Santana's "Evil Ways," one of the previously unreleased bonus performances. Considering that the event is something of a sacred cow by now, this trick may strike some as blasphemous. Then again, this is hardly the first time that a live concert recording has been sweetened, re-recorded, or otherwise enhanced. In fact, it'd be hard to find one that wasn't. And the additions would have gone largely unnoticed if we hadn't been told about them.) In the end, though, theres only so much improvement possible, and was never about technical brilliance anyway. Nor was it mostly about the music, either. Nor was it mostly about the music, either. There are some terrific performances, from acoustic numbers by Richie Havens and Crosby, Stills & Nash to powerful electric contributions from Santana, Sly & the Family Stone, and Joe Cocker. But the truth is that Monterey Pop, which happened two years earlier, was the more exciting concert, and of the several artists who appeared on both bills (including Jimi Hendrix, Janis Joplin, the Who, Jefferson Airplane, and others), all of them made better music at the California festival. But Woodstock was always less a concert than an overall cultural happening, and Wadleigh and his crew, often employing an effective split-screen technique, do a superb job of corralling and conveying the remarkable atmosphere and spirit of it; you didn't have to be there to recognize that this was the zenith of the Age of Aquarius (it was also the twilight; with Altamont looming, things would never be this peaceful and idealistic again). Of principal interest on the second disc will be two hours of additional musical performances, including both additional tunes by those who are in the main feature and appearances by five artists who for various reasons (ego, money, quality, time) never made it into the film at all; of the latter, Creedence Clearwater Revival is excellent, Paul Butterfield and Johnny Winter are good, Mountain is mediocre, and the Grateful Dead, with an interminable (38 minutes!) "Turn on Your Love Light," are awful (a special Blu-ray-only feature lets users organize this material as they see fit). Meanwhile, "From Festival to Feature," a new, hour-long look at the making of the movie, is absorbing and minutely detailed. The Amazon-exclusive content (included on disc 2) is an additional 20 minutes of never-before-seen performance footage in high definition from Grateful Dead, Jefferson Airplane, and Country Joe and the Fish plus three bonus featurettes. Product Description
1969 was a year unlike any other. Man first set foot on the moon. The New York Mets won the World Series against all odds. And for three days in the rural town of Bethel, New York, half a million people experienced the single most defining moment of their generation; a concert unprecedented in scope and influence, a coming together of people from all walks of life with a single common goal: Peace and music. They called it Woodstock. One year later, a landmark Oscar-winning documentary captured the essence of the music, the electricity of the performances, and the experience of those who lived it. Newly remastered, the film features legendary performances by 17 best selling artists.

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