It’s 1969, and Elliot Tiber, a down-on-his-luck interior designer in Greenwich Village, New York, has to move back upstate to help his parents run their dilapidated Catskills motel, the El Monaco. The bank is about to foreclose; his father wants to burn the place down, but hasn’t paid the insurance; and Elliot is still figuring how to come out to his parents. When Elliot hears that a neighbouring town has pulled the permit on a hippie music festival, he calls the producers, thinking he could drum up some much needed business for the motel. Three weeks later, half a million people are on their way to his neighbour’s farm in White Lake, NY, and Elliot finds himself swept up in a generation-defining experience that would change his life, and popular culture, forever. —Cannes Film Festival
Born in 1954 in Taipei, he graduated from the National Taiwan College of Arts in 1975 and then went to the United States, where he studied theater directing at the University of Illinois and film production at New York University. After winning awards in 1985 for his student work (while at N.Y.U., he also worked on Spike Lee’s acclaimed student film, Joe’s Bed-Stuy Barbershop: We Cut Heads), Lee spent the next six years working on screenplays, eventually making his directorial debut in 1992 with Pushing Hands. A comedy about the generational and cultural gaps in a Taiwanese family in New York, it won awards in Lee’s native country. His next film, The Wedding Banquet (1993), further explored cultural and generational differences through a gay New Yorker who stages a marriage of convenience to please his visiting Taiwanese parents. The film met with widespread acclaim, winning a Golden Bear at the Berlin Film Festival and a Best Director prize at the Seattle Film Festival, as well as… read more
Such a heart-warming feel good movie. I would have enjoyed taking a glimpse at actual concert footage but it's also nice to see the film focus on the lovely characters and their emotional journeys instead. Ang Lee gathers a spirited cast and manages to tell a story about friendship, independence, vitality and the power of music in beautiful images. A little kitschy here and there but still lots of fun to watch.
A frustratingly weak effort - what's the main point of Ang Lee's film ? Surely, it couldn't be a kaleidoscope of hippie life and liberalism in the 60s, they are simply portrayed as grass hoppers who get naked and wander like some Down's Syndrome 18 year-olds.
I'm guessing many who follow a site like this one spent their morning coffee time today reading about Ted Kennedy. You may even have
Truthfully, I believe that the thing so many detractors point to concerning Taking Woodstock is my favorite part of the whole endeavor. I thought that the trailers did a very good job of explaining… read review
This is one of the most uninformative, uninteresting, and unconvincing movies I’ve ever seen. If I wasn’t too exhausted from the rest of the festival I would have walked out, but I have a policy not… read review
Even with an excellent visual direction and high level of technical polish and production design, Ang Lee’s “Taking Woodstock” comes out uneven and to some extent unconvincing. In my opinion, the story… read review