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Gimme Shelter

Play trailer Poster for Gimme Shelter PG 1970 1h 30m Documentary Play Trailer Watchlist
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93% Tomatometer 30 Reviews 91% Popcornmeter 5,000+ Ratings
The landmark documentary about the tragically ill-fated Rolling Stones free concert at Altamont Speedway on December 6, 1969. Only four months earlier, Woodstock defined the Love Generation; now it lay in ruins on a desolate racetrack six miles outside of San Francisco.

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Gimme Shelter

Gimme Shelter

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Critics Consensus

Equal parts essential and chilling, Gimme Shelter provides a spine-tingling look at how the Rolling Stones' music paralleled the end of the counterculture movement.

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Critics Reviews

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Margaret Hinxman Daily Telegraph (UK) 03/11/2020
The documentary filmmakers, the Maysles brothers, have recorded the events prior to, during and after the festival with a chilling sense of drama. Go to Full Review
Howard Smith Village Voice 01/18/2013
It's knowing about the killing, and waiting for it to happen on the screen that gives the film its energy and thrust. Go to Full Review
Chris Vognar Dallas Morning News 02/28/2002
A
This is a seminal rock doc, and the actual music is only a small part of the magic. Go to Full Review
Gordon Young Fresno Bee 11/10/2023
If any lesson is to be learned from this film it is that rock festivals require considerable planning. They can be a celebration of life, but that requires some Establishment cooperation... In any event, Jagger is great. Go to Full Review
Dan Lybarger Arkansas Democrat-Gazette 11/20/2021
Because of the warped chronology, Gimme Shelter makes for absorbing viewing. It's also a chilling lesson in humility. Go to Full Review
Paul Schrader Cinema 06/30/2020
In the end, Gimme Shelter remains a film of shallow intentions; its aesthetics seem those of possibility and opportunism rather than necessity and moral commitment. Go to Full Review
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Audience Reviews

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CodyZamboni Z @CodyZamboni Oct 12 Solid documentary, Wise to show Stones' performances of all their hits at the beginning, then cuts back to the last minute slapdash set up of a free concert at Altamont Speedway, Documenting the drug alcohol fueled escalating violence, starting the afternoon, and resulting in stabbing of concert goer by Hells Angels, Colossal miscalcuation by Stones, and the promoter by hiring criminal thugs Hells Angels as security, Exciting pumped up concert music vibe gives way to a somber, horrific end to the 60's, The nail in the coffin of the flower power hippe love era. See more Pete B @RT37223507 03/25/2025 One of the greatest rock docs ever. The Stones at their peak, but also the dark side of the ‘60s music scene. The Altamont footage is just haunting, and you can feel the shift happening. A must-watch for rock fans. See more Johnathon W @Hoppynsc 02/25/2024 Classic rock documentary that marks the end of the 60's. What's interesting is that this was meant to the a straight forward coverage of the Rolling Stones's American tour only for the Maysles to capture the chaos at Altamont, including the moment a Hell's Angel stabs a man to death on screen. Brutal and honest, the best kind of documentaries. See more Marc Z @TKDLife 05/24/2023 This look at The Rolling Stones and the infamous free concerts at Altamonte is the basis for the amazingly well made musical documentary. This is one of the best ever made, and even better if you like the music of The Rolling Stones. It is a look at music, culture, the 1960's and a really tragic incident which marred this great event. This is well made and features tons of great behind the scenes footage. It is a concert and so much more. See more William L @RT77267842 05/10/2021 Four people died at Altamont Speedway in 1969 - two in a hit-and-run, one drowned after an LSD trip, and one stabbed in the confusion surrounding the event - each representative of the mishmash of countercultural subgroups that had developed (from your generic hippies to the Hell's Angels) and the general lack of identity that had invaded the movement as it simply got too large to stay cohesive. There was no longer a clear unifying force behind it all and as a result, some lashed out each other or simply found themselves spiraling out of control in self-destructive patterns. Jagger and the rest of the Stones move around the film as you would expect them to in their primes, in a trancelike daze from one gig to the next, enjoying the attention and the sex as they were heralded as the kings of rock and roll, right up until it all collapses in on itself like a black hole. The film leaves the group staring out at a crowd that they no longer understand, shaped by forces beyond their control, now intermittently violent and dangerous; their pleas with the crowd are fruitless, and they end up airlifted from the concert grounds. Pieces together fascinating bits of documentary footage to establish the freewheeling nature of the one of the greatest bands in the world, then using their own disillusionment to discuss the end of a cultural era - the bell that signaled the slow decline of the counterculture movement. One of the great concert documentaries. (4/5) See more andres s @RT93190512 04/08/2021 Jeez man The Stones were electric! So much energy especially from Jagger. He really is a showman. So crazy and hilarious seeing them so young and stoned. Very interesting to watch all the archival footage that was filmed during their rise to stardom and also the days leading up to the Altamont concert. So insane seeing all the planning and hype that went in to the concert. I mean this was like the biggest event of the century and even more so since it was free. Amazing seeing how deeply influenced they were by American blues. They would even go to hillbilly country parts of America like Alabama to record some of their earlier songs. So crazy seeing all the different kinds of people that showed up to the concert and seeing all the absolute wonderfully fucking beautiful chaos that was happening. The Hell's Angels definitely had an intimidating and menacing presence being there. Hell hath come on two wheels. I mean they were basically being bullies in a sense. The vibes were all off, all over the place with them being there. I feel like they should have hired personal guards that they knew instead of the Hell's Angels. I feel like the Angels were really quick to fly off the handle whenever someone acted up, always leading to punches and a scuffle. I do have to commend them though for stopping that black guy with the gun who could have potentially opened fire on the band, harming innocents in the process. The planning of everything seemed very spontaneous and haphazard. Really fucked up and sad to see how the mood of the whole event changes as soon as the Angels started beating on people. This was supposed to be the biggest event of the year that would bring people together one last time before the beginning of a new decade. What should of been a night filled with peace, love and rock & roll turned into a night of pandemonium and violence. Marking the beginning of the end of what once was the year of peace & love and bringing an end to the counterculture movement. The raw footage is incredible to watch. Especially during the last half of the documentary, it's impossible to look away as one gets entranced with the whole experience that's going on during the event. One of the rawest and honest music documentaries that exists. Very impactful and hard-hitting. See more Read all reviews
Gimme Shelter

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Movie Info

Synopsis The landmark documentary about the tragically ill-fated Rolling Stones free concert at Altamont Speedway on December 6, 1969. Only four months earlier, Woodstock defined the Love Generation; now it lay in ruins on a desolate racetrack six miles outside of San Francisco.
Director
Albert Maysles, David Maysles, Charlotte Zwerin
Distributor
Criterion Collection, Kit Parker Films Inc
Production Co
Maysles Films, Penforta
Rating
PG
Genre
Documentary
Original Language
English
Release Date (Theaters)
Dec 6, 1970, Wide
Rerelease Date (Theaters)
Aug 11, 2000
Release Date (Streaming)
May 22, 2017
Box Office (Gross USA)
$252.6K
Runtime
1h 30m
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