Roger Waters The Wall is in limited theatrical release and we've experienced it!
It’s no secret Pink Floyd’s landmark 1979
album The Wall is a landmark
achievement in music history. Beloved by
fans around the world and regarded as the album which would ultimately dissolve
chief songwriter Roger Waters’ relationship with the band, it’s the story of
Pink, a burnt out rock star who grows completely isolated from his fellow man
as he slips into madness in his hotel room.
It’s a timeless masterpiece whose epic scale is as large and spectacular
as the celebrated live show in which a brick wall was built between the band
and the audience over the course of the show.
After Waters left Pink Floyd, he would resurrect The Wall once again in 1990 in Berlin with a number of guest
performers aiding the concert and most recently toured a revised live show
between 2010 and 2013.
Following and
documenting his tour, Waters co-directed the recently released documentary
concert film Roger Waters The Wall
which chronicles the 72 year old Waters’ spectacular concert and most
surprisingly of all provides a wraparound narrative concerning Waters private
spiritual battle with his demons primarily involving the death of his father in
WWII. Much of the concert is
interspersed with these remarkable scenes of Waters driving through Britain to
Anzio, Italy to confront the site of his father’s death. It’s a startlingly personal self-portrait of
grief and closure which in hindsight is far closer to Waters’ original
cinematic vision for The Wall than
the 1982 Alan Parker film.

The concert footage, it goes without
saying, is fantastic! Shot and
exquisitely framed in 2.35:1 widescreen with newly computer animated sequences
projected onto the wall set as well as reworked Gerald Scarfe animation from
the 1982 film, this is one of the most well-made concert films with a narrative
thread linking it all together since the Talking Heads concert film Stop Making Sense. While many of the songs and inflatables of
the teacher, mother, girlfriend and finally the neo-Nazi pig are familiar to
countless fans, Waters manages to surprise with many new technical innovations
including crystal clear images projected onto the wall and new song transitions
never heard before! If there’s any minor
complaint to make of the whole thing, it has to do with the specificity of
Waters’ political targets.
Throughout
the show, images of citizens who have lost their lives to war are projected
onto the wall and there were times when my thoughts drifted to the song The Fletcher Memorial Home when Waters
names off a derisive laundry list of political figures. Despite the new Wall show feeling a bit preachy with these additions, this is as
close to Waters’ original intentions for The
Wall film as well as a self-portrait of the man as we’re likely to ever
get. Following the picture was an
interview with both Roger Waters and Nick Mason sharing memories of Pink Floyd
as well as some much needed laughs to send everyone home feeling their evening
was well spent. While most people will
see Roger Waters The Wall either on
demand or wait until the impending blu-ray release, this was clearly meant to
be seen and heard in a theater with a large screen and big Dolby Atmos
sound! If you thought this was simply
going to be another concert film (a great one at that nonetheless), like Liam
Neeson wisely says in his introduction to the film, you’re in for a real
treat!
Score
-Andrew Kotwicki
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