Pink Floyd: The Wall
Alan Parker
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Plot Summary
The story of THE WALL is told simply with the music of Pink Floyd, images and natural effects. There is no conventional dialogue to progress the narrative. Our story is about Pink, a Rock and Roll performer, who sits locked in a hotel room, somewhere in Los Angeles. Too many shows, too much dope, too much applause: a burned out case. On the TV, an all too familiar war film flickers on the screen. We shuffle time and place, reality and nightmare as we venture into Pink’s painful memories, each one a “brick” in the wall he has gradually built around his feelings. Slowly he withdraws from the real world and slips further into his nightmare as he imagines himself as an unfeeling demagogue, for whom all that is left is the demonstration of power over his unthinking audience, the culmination of the odious excess of his own world and the world around him. His internal self trail follows, as the witnesses of his past life, the very people who have contributed to the building of the wall, come forward and testify against him.
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Customer Reviews
Life Changing
If you are looking for an hour an a half of powerful, life-changing video accompanied by only Pink Floyd music, look no further. I watched this for the first time when I was 14 and I have seen it 3 times since, each time feeling just as involved as the first time I saw it. I have never liked movies in my life, and this one just completely blew me away. Although some of the graphics may be thought of as inappropriate, they illustrate the story of The Wall exactly as Roger Waters saw it. The storyline has never been more clear or spelled out, and after you watch it once, you will be thinking about it for the rest of your life. There are so many hidden meanings and advice in The Wall (the album) and The Wall (the movie). BUY IT NOW! or you will spend the rest of your life regretting it. :)
It is great, but...
Not a movie everyone could understand. You really need to read between the lines and interperet a movie like this. The whole thing is basically a giant metaphor. I loved it, but I can easily see why someone would have a hard time enjoying it.
Yes
This movie is kick-awesome
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