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Tommy » Film

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  • Format: 2-DVD
  • Label: Odyssey
  • Released: 2004-06-14
  • Barcode: 5018011202905
  • Buy from: Buy from Amazon

  • Notes: Region 2, 2-Disc Collector's Edition
  • Added by: RCK trades ok
  • Format: DVD
  • Label: Sony
  • Released: 1999
  • Barcode: 043396026117
  • Buy from: Buy from CDUniverse.com Buy from Amazon

  • Length: 1:51:00
  • Added by: Deester
  • Format: VHS
  • Label: Sony
  • Released: 1996-02-06
  • Barcode: 043396602458
  • Buy from: Buy from Amazon

  • Added by: IrwinK
  • Tracks: 1. Amazing Journey
    2. Sensation
    3. Welcome
    4. Sally Simpson
    5. We're Not Gonna Take It
    6. Fiddle About
    7. Tommy's Holiday Camp
    8. Eyesight to the Blind
    9. Acid Queen
    10. Pinball Wizard
    11. Bernie's Holiday Camp
    12. You Didn't Hear It
    13. Christmas
    14. There's a Doctor
    15. Tommy, Can You Hear Me?
    16. Smash the Mirror
    17. Go to the Mirror
    18. Cousin Kevin
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Posted 2008-07-29 16:35:02:
Amazon.com: If you've ever wanted to hear Jack Nicholson sing (or try to) or marvel at the sight of Ann-Margret drunkenly cavorting in a cascade of baked beans, Tommy is the movie you've been waiting for. As it turns out, the Who's brilliant rock opera is sublimely matched to director Ken Russell's penchant for cinematic excess, and this 1975 production finds Russell at the peak of his filmmaking audacity. It's a fever-dream of musical bombast, custom-fit to the thematic ambition of Pete Townshend's epic rock drama, revolving around the titular "deaf, dumb, and blind kid" (played by Who vocalist Roger Daltrey) who survives the childhood trauma that stole his senses to become a Pinball Wizard messiah in Townshend's grandiose attack on the hypocrisy of organized religion.

The story is remarkably coherent considering the hypnotic dream-state induced by Russell's visuals. Tommy's odyssey is rendered through wall-to-wall music, each song representing a pivotal chapter in Tommy's chronology, from the bloodstream shock of "The Acid Queen" (performed to the hilt by Tina Turner) to Nicholson's turn as a well-intentioned physician, Elton John's towering rendition of "Pinball Wizard," and Daltrey's epiphanous rendition of "I'm Free." Other performers include Eric Clapton and (most outrageously) the Who's drummer Keith Moon, and through it all Russell is almost religiously faithful to Townshend's artistic vision. Although it divided critics when first released, Tommy now looks likes a minor classic of gonzo cinema, worthy of the musical genius that fueled its creation. --Jeff Shannon > 3 Comments

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