End of the Century - The Story of the Ramones
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Average customer review:Product Description
In 1974 the New York City music scene was shocked into consiousness by a band of misfits from Queens called the Ramones. Playing in seedy Bowery bar to a small group of fellow struggling musicians, the band struck a chord of disharmony that rocked the foundation of the '70s music scene. Tracing the history of the band, from its unlikely origins through its star-crossed career, bitter demise and the sad fates of Joey and Dee Dee, End of the Century is a vibrant, candid document of one of the most influential groups in the history of rock.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #15878 in DVD
- Released on: 2005-03-15
- Rating: Unrated
- Aspect ratio: 1.78:1
- Number of discs: 1
- Formats: Color, Dolby, DVD, NTSC
- Original language: English
- Subtitled in: German, English, Spanish, Portuguese, French
- Number of discs: 1
- Running time: 110 minutes
Customer Reviews
The Ramones: Warted and Recognized
Well, I just bought Hey, Ho, Let's Go: The Anthology, so I guess the documentary left its mark last night. Put simply, like Festival Express, this is a must see for 1) fans of the Ramones, 2) rock history buffs, 3) fans of rock music, period. There, that should cover most folks who have stumbled on to this review.
Unlike Festival Express, where the movie highlights were the performances, End has plenty of in-concert performances but is most interesting for the extensive and cross-cutting interviews with band members, managers, and people from other bands, most notably, the late Joe Strummer of Clash. Stepping out from those stock bowl haircuts and black uniforms, the Ramones get in End a portrait that celebrates their individuality, their determination and their warts (Joey's inability to forgive, Johnny's often martinet leadership, DeeDee's willingness to abuse his body in every way imaginable -- and I would guess some unimaginable). Along with the music, what comes through so strongly is their love for the group, if not for each other, and their work ethic -- in all their years they missed only one concert for band misbehavior and Johnny fired Marky over it.
You watch End of the Century wondering how someone as sensitive as Joey ever lived at all, expecting DeeDee to have his overdose on screen in the middle of an interview, respecting Johnny's vision, even if often disagreeing with his methods. And now they are all dead, making even more poignant that moment late in the movie when the off-screen interviewer asks, after Joey's death, Johnny if he felt something when Joey died. Pause. And Johnny says, yes, he felt something, he felt bad all the week of Joey's death, even after not calling him while he was dying, not speaking for nearly two decades. Why, probes the interviewer, why did you feel something? Another pause, and then Johnny says because he was a Ramone, because he loved the Ramones, the group, the music. Moving stuff, moving and entertaining movie.
P.S. Don't miss the swell moment when Debby Harry and Blondie are singing Heart of Glass in what looks like some bubble-machine disco set. Very weird.
Rock n roll will never die
The Ramones' music sounds eternal to me. It is raw power, "white heat," as Joe Strummer describes it during this excellent documentary. This release takes on added meaning after the passing of two Ramones, but it's more than just the story of one particular legendary band. It's about the early days of American punk, the CBGB's scene of the late '70s, and even the essence of rock n roll itself. Thru it all is the mighty music of a band that stands as an icon for the last century and will do so into the future. Besides all of that high falutin' stuff, though, End of the Century is just a fascinating documentary to watch. I got totally engrossed in the origins of the group, their rise to glory, the various in-fighting and love-hate relationships within the band, etc. The extras with the DVD are pretty good too, although a little more care could have gone into their presentation. For example, the short feature on "Who wrote what" with Tommy Ramone is fun, but an off-camera interviewer names the songs in a barely audible voice while Tommy says who wrote them. How hard would it have been to run the song titles on the screen as Tommy named the writers for each of them? Instead it's nearly impossible to hear some of the titles as the interviewer softly calls them out.
Great film. Not a concert dvd!
I just want to point out something that I think some Ramones fans might be missing; and that is; this is a moving film about a dysfunctional rock and roll family who were stuck with each other for over 20 years in spite of the fact that they wanted to escape each other. They weren't like other bands who travelled first class and could escape to private quarters on luxury buses either. They travelled well into their 40s in small rental vans so they were really in each other's faces.
And that's the point. It's not "depressing" or "short on concert footage" per se. I don't think that is the point at all. It's a documentary film that strips away all the rock illusions of glamour and fame that fans might WISH was the truth but it just ain't. This is what it's really like to be a punk rocker...for life. It ain't pretty and if you can't take it then you probably don't really understand what the Ramones and everyone like them were really about in the first place.
So, as a film fan, I loved it. It was touching and funny and poignant. So I say to ramones fans looking for confirmation of something that never truly existed, open your mind and try to accept what this excellent film is trying to tell you; the real life of our rock heros is not the wonderful, glamorous dream we, as fans, get lost in. This is what it is.




