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Once Were Brothers

Ticket Information

  • Adult: $17.50 each
  • Concession - with I.D: $15.00 each
  • Eventfinda tickets no longer on sale

Dates

  • Sat 1 Aug 2020, 8:15pm–9:55pm

Restrictions

All Ages

Listed by

tessapmlp

The saga of The Band, whose iconic farewell concert was immortalised in The Last Waltz, continues to captivate in this new documentary shaped from the perspective of guitarist-songwriter Robbie Robertson, only one of two surviving members.
In a sense Robbie Robertson only has one story, but it’s a great one: how four Canadian rockers and an Arkansas drummer set out together in the early 1960s and wound up in the eye of that decade’s cultural hurricane. The story of The Band was the basis of Martin Scorsese’s The Last Waltz, and has been revisited by countless rock chroniclers since.
But the years since The Last Waltz have given it a sad coda, with several of Robertson’s bandmates falling to addictions and early deaths, and a bitter disagreement between Robbie and his southern confederate Levon Helm, who accused him of using The Band to further his own ambitions.
It’s hard not to see Once Were Brothers as Robertson’s response to Ain’t in It For My Health (NZIFF11), the unvarnished 2010 documentary that told the tale from Helm’s point of view. Robertson’s version is more magnanimous, yet one can’t help feeling he is, once again, furthering an agenda. And yet the whole thing is brought to life with a wealth of rare and unseen images, plus revealing interviews including the uproarious Ronnie Hawkins and the rarely seen Dominique Robertson, Robbie’s wife. There is also plenty of The Band’s music which, of course, sounds as great as ever. — Nick Bollinger

[Robertson’s] bona fides as a legend are assured; you’re reminded, watching this trip through some key chapters of a musician’s life, what a huge part he played in the art form. — Author, Source
https://www.rollingstone.com/movies/movie-reviews/once-were-brothers-review-robbie-robertson-doc-932871/

FILMMAKER BIO
Daniel Roher is a documentary filmmaker from Toronto. He has directed multiple non-fiction shorts and the documentary Ghosts of Our Forest (2017). Once Were Brothers is his second feature film.

CREDITS
Once Were Brothers: Robbie Robertson and The Band
Canada
2019
Director: Daniel Roher
Producers: Stephen Paniccia, Andrew Munger, Sam Sutherland, Lana Belle Mauro
Photography: Kiarash Sadigh
Editors: Eamonn O’Connor, Daniel Roher
With: Martin Scorsese, Bruce Springsteen, Eric Clapton, Ronnie Hawkins, Dominique Robertson, Van Morrison, Taj Mahal
Festivals: Toronto, DOC NYC, Amsterdam Documentary 2019
Exempt: Documentary film exempt from NZ Classification labelling requirements
100 minutes
Presented in association with Magic Music

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