Gimme Shelter
Brief Synopsis
Cast & Crew
David Maysles
Mick Jagger
Keith Richard
Mick Taylor
Charlie Watts
Bill Wyman
Film Details
Technical Specs
Synopsis
The film is divided into two time sequences: the Rolling Stones' 1969 concert tour of the United States, and the Stones themselves watching films of the events. The scenes of the tour are interspersed with performances in Madison Square Garden, where Ike and Tina Turner are also seen, as plans for a free concert are developed. Contrasted with the scenes at the Garden is a summation of the aftermath at Altamont. At a press conference in the Rainbow Room in New York City, Mick Jagger announces that the free concert is to be held in San Francisco. Later in the tour, lawyer Melvin Belli tries to line up a site for the concert and finally acquires the Altamont Speedway, owned by Dick Carter. The scene shifts to Altamont. The Flying Burrito Brothers perform, but the Jefferson Airplane is interrupted by scuffles between the Hell's Angels (paid in beer to protect the performers and maintain order) and the crowd. Marty Balin of the Jefferson Airplane is hit, as Grace Slick's plea for peace fails to ease the violent atmosphere. That evening, the Stones appear, escorted to the stage by the Angels who clear a path with their motorcycles. As the anxious crowd of over 300,000 see the Stones begin to sing, fighting erupts, and Jagger's efforts to calm the mass prove ineffectual. After one number, a black youth in the audience is seen waving a gun and is stabbed to death by one of the Angels. The concert concludes, and a helicopter carries the Stones away from Altamont.
Cast
Mick Jagger
Keith Richard
Mick Taylor
Charlie Watts
Bill Wyman
Ike And Tina Turner
Jefferson Airplane
The Flying Burrito Brothers
Melvin Belli
Dick Carter
Sonny Barger
Crew
Peter Adair
Alembic Recording
Mirra Bank
Michael Becker
Porter Bibb
Bill Blachy
John Brumbaugh
Baird Bryant
Joanne Burke
Jerry Butler
Howard Chesley
Peter Churchill
Pepper Crawford
Stanley Cronquist
Paul Deason
Ron Dorfman
Robert Elfstrom
Elliott Erwitt
Robert Farren
Robert Fiore
Adam Giffard
Ellen Giffard
Stanley Goldstein
Tom Goodwin
Earl Green
Mick Jagger
Glyn Johns
Robert Johnson
Bill Kaplan
Kevin Keating
Janet Lauretano
Stephen Lighthill
Orly Lindgren
George Lucas
Albert Maysles
David Maysles
Fred Mcdowell
Kent Mckinney
Carl Montgomery
Jim Moody
Walter Murch
Fred Neil
Jack Newman
Pekke Niemela
Peter Pilafian
Robert Primes
Otis Redding
Relpic
Keith Richard
Paul Ryan
Eric Saarinen
Ronald Schneider
Peter Smokler
Susan Steinberg
Nelson Stroll
Alvin Tokunow
Coulter Watt
Gary Weiss
Haskell Wexler
Bill Yarrus
Videos
Movie Clip
Trailer
Hosted Intro
Film Details
Technical Specs
Articles
Gimme Shelter
A visceral reaction to the violence and turmoil of the Vietnam War and race riots that had turned newscasts into real-life horror programs, the album and the song "Gimme Shelter" were ominous enough without the real-life tragedy that brought the tour to a horrific end at the notorious Altamont Free Concert, which was held on December 6, 1969 at the Altamont Speedway in Northern California. With beer-bribed Hells Angels barricading the stage and an unruly crowd high on various substances, the event quickly escalated into violence and vandalism even before the Stones arrived on stage. At the end of the day-long event (which also included performances by acts like Jefferson Airplane, Santana, and Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young), a pistol-wielding youth named Meredith Hunter was stabbed to death by one of the Angels, Alan Passaro, while attempting to charge the stage. The incident was caught on film and became the defining moment of the documentary while also symbolically closing the door on the peace and love generation.
However, the film begins in happier times earlier in the tour with a performance at Madison Square Garden and preparations for the live album Get Yer Ya-Ya's Out, helmed by directors Albert and David Maysles and Charlotte Zwerin. Also among the film's cameramen at different points were Martin Scorsese (who had just worked as an assistant director on Woodstock) and George Lucas (whose footage was not used for the final cut). The Maysles Brothers were no strangers to the world of rock music, having made a 1964 short documentary about The Beatles (What's Happening! The Beatles in the USA) but were better known for their now-classic 1968 documentary feature with Zwerin, Salesman. As a team they continued working until David's death in 1987 with their most famous achievement arguably being the 1975 documentary Grey Gardens, a vivid portrait of the lives of the two Edie Beales in upstate New York.
The Maysles films form a crucial component of what was termed the Direct Cinema movement, which was devoted to capturing the organic process of real events without creative distortion. That edict required the use of easily portable cameras and, by necessity, an often loose and improvised shooting style that evolved in tandem with the similarly unpolished look of North American experimental cinema of the era. The United States branch of the movement is usually traced to Drew Associates, a creative company founded by Life magazine reporter Robert Drew who also recruited other soon to be influential documentarians like D.A. Pennebaker and Richard Leacock.
What makes Gimme Shelter a unique case is the fact that the unscripted events which became the film's major claim to fame also form a reaction from the participants interviewed after the fact. The capturing of the death on film raises a number of issues dealt with by Direct Cinema, as the details witnessed in two seconds of celluloid become the catalyst for a number of different readings and sociological changes. Even today the film remains a vital title among film courses and is often cited as one of the most important documentaries of all time, with essays and pop culture references still trying to sort it all out. In his essay for the film's Criterion release (one of several commissioned for that set), journalist and author Michael Lydon summed it up especially well: "As one who was there, I most want Gimme Shelter's new viewers to know how deeply the disturbing drama of this film sprang from the disturbing drama of the times. Nostalgic journalism has made the sixties an innocent time of love, peace, and flowers, but living through the decade didn't feel like that to me. Becoming a hippie was fun but at the same time a scary, soul-wrenching process. Altamont was one of many dark and dangerous bummers I, and seemingly everyone else, stumbled into as we reached for new ideals and possibilities."
By Nathaniel Thompson
Gimme Shelter
Quotes
Trivia
Notes
Filmed in 16mm.
Miscellaneous Notes
Released in United States Winter December 6, 1970
Re-released in United States December 7, 1994
Re-released in United States December 16, 1994
Re-released in United States August 11, 2000
Released in United States on Video November 14, 2000
Released in United States July 1996
Released in United States 1997
Released in United States October 2000
Released in United States February 2001
Released in United States March 2002
Shown at Hamptons International Film Festival (World Cinema) October 11-15, 2000.
Shown at Berlin International Film Festival (Panorama) February 7-18, 2001.
Shown at South by Southwest (SXSW) Film Festival in Austin, Texas March 8-17, 2002.
Formerly distributed by Cinema V Distributing Inc. and Almi Cinema 5.
2000 re-release is a newly restored, uncensored 35mm print.
Released in United States Winter December 6, 1970
Re-released in United States December 7, 1994 (Cinema Village; New York City)
Re-released in United States December 16, 1994 (Laemmle's Sunset 5; Los Angeles)
Re-released in United States August 11, 2000 (Film Forum; New York City)
Released in United States on Video November 14, 2000
Released in United States July 1996 (Shown in New York City (American Museum of the Moving Image) as part of program "Rock Music Revivals" July 6-7, 1996.)
Released in United States 1997 (Shown in New York City (Film Forum) as part of program "60's Verite" November 14 - December 11, 1997.)
Released in United States October 2000 (Shown at Hamptons International Film Festival (World Cinema) October 11-15, 2000.)
Released in United States February 2001 (Shown at Berlin International Film Festival (Panorama) February 7-18, 2001.)
Released in United States March 2002 (Shown at South by Southwest (SXSW) Film Festival in Austin, Texas March 8-17, 2002.)