Director/Producer Stephen Woolley's STONED is a dramatic attempt--researched for 10 years--to accurately portray the controversial events surrounding the death on July 2nd, 1969 of Rolling Stones founding member and guitarist Brian Jones at age 27. To create his work, Woolley synthesized the written memoirs and testimonials of .. Read more
| Starring | Paddy Considine, Monet Mazur, Leo Gregory, Luke De Woolfson |
|---|---|
| Director | Stephen Woolley |
| Genres | Drama |
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Director/Producer Stephen Woolley's STONED is a dramatic attempt--researched for 10 years--to accurately portray the controversial events surrounding the death on July 2nd, 1969 of Rolling Stones founding member and guitarist Brian Jones at age 27. To create his work, Woolley synthesized the written memoirs and testimonials of the witnesses who were there. Beginning a few months before his death, the film focuses on a relationship Brian Jones (Leo Gregory) forged with Frank Thorogood (Paddy Constantine), a builder hired to fix up the rock star's home. Alone--save for his girlfriend Anna--and ostracized from his band-mates due to drug problems and legal tangles, Jones draws Thorogood in as a part-time friend and part-time assistant. When Jones is summarily fired from the band--only weeks before his demise--Thorogood is also let go, and becomes jealous and enraged. Deftly placed flashbacks throughout the film catalogue Jones's ascent and--more gratuitously--his drug-filled self-destructive descent. Coupling these with the volatile relationship with Thorogood, the film discreetly shows the complex causes of Jones’ untimely death. To capture the spirit of the times, Woolley fills his soundtrack with 1960s nuggets, including excellent covers of Stones material by modern British acts like A Band of Bees and Little Barrie. He also shoots the flashbacks and recreated concert footage with a hand-held 16mm camera, achieving a real-life documentary feel.
| Starring | Paddy Considine, Monet Mazur, Leo Gregory, Luke De Woolfson, Nathalie Cox, David Morrissey, Tuva Novotny, Amelia Warner, Ben Whishaw, James D. White, Ras Barker, Will Adamsdale |
|---|---|
| Director | Stephen Woolley |
| Studio | SONY PICTURES HOME ENTERTAINMENT |
| Run time | DVD: 1 hr 38 mins |
| Certificate | |
| Genres | Drama |
| Language | DVD: English |
| Hearing-impaired | English |
| Released | DVD: 03 Apr 2006 Production year: 2005 |
| Format | DVD |
Woolley has chosen a smart dynamic with which to investigate the death of Rolling Stones guitarist Brian Jones and, in... read more on Time Out
Film accurately picked up on some mannerisms. Brian spent a lot of time looking to see who/what people around him were looking at, if it wasn't him and why. Rarely seemed to live in the moment, unless out of it.
Filmed skipped 2 main things about Brian
1. how overtly cuttingly manipulative he could be [film made it more subtle and careless]
2. how experimental he was with new kinds of music. Incorporated 'world music' 30 years before the term was coined.
'Mick' excellent, but film really cleaned up Keith's act. Pretty accurate environments and atmospheres, excellent costumes, but very bad men's wigs.
Watch it with 'Performance' and 'The Doors' and you'll get a feel for the times.
Was it a good time? ?
Hmmm... lots of mistakes and too many casualties. However there was more shared passion, vision and commitment to change everything for the better than has ever existed since then and the optimism of that time is preferable to the suspicion and cynicism of today.
This film is so, so bad. I found it almost unwatchable, You don't even need to watch it through to the end, you see the death at the beginning of the film and know how it ends anyway. The guy playing Brian Jones is so embarrassingly bad an actor. He fumbles and mumbles his way through the film like a Hugh Grant parody. I really had high expectations for this film. What I expected to be an exciting story and portrait of a sixties icon turned out to be a bland story about a painter and decorator (seriously). Do not waste your time.