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All Things Must Pass: The Rise and Fall of Tower Records

  • 2015
  • 0
  • 1 Std. 34 Min.
IMDb-BEWERTUNG
7,3/10
3721
IHRE BEWERTUNG
All Things Must Pass: The Rise and Fall of Tower Records (2015)
A documentary that explores the rise and fall of Tower Records, and its legacy forged by its rebellious founder, Russ Solomon.
trailer wiedergeben2:05
2 Videos
8 Fotos
DokumentarfilmGeschichteMusik

"All Things Must Pass" ist ein Dokumentarfilm, der dem Aufstieg und Fall von Tower Records und dem Vermächtnis des rebellischen Gründers Russ Solomon nachgeht."All Things Must Pass" ist ein Dokumentarfilm, der dem Aufstieg und Fall von Tower Records und dem Vermächtnis des rebellischen Gründers Russ Solomon nachgeht."All Things Must Pass" ist ein Dokumentarfilm, der dem Aufstieg und Fall von Tower Records und dem Vermächtnis des rebellischen Gründers Russ Solomon nachgeht.

  • Regie
    • Colin Hanks
  • Drehbuch
    • Steven Leckart
  • Hauptbesetzung
    • Russ Solomon
    • Michael Solomon
    • Heidi Cotler
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • IMDb-BEWERTUNG
    7,3/10
    3721
    IHRE BEWERTUNG
    • Regie
      • Colin Hanks
    • Drehbuch
      • Steven Leckart
    • Hauptbesetzung
      • Russ Solomon
      • Michael Solomon
      • Heidi Cotler
    • 27Benutzerrezensionen
    • 27Kritische Rezensionen
    • 73Metascore
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • Videos2

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 2:05
    Official Trailer
    All Things Must Pass
    Promo 0:27
    All Things Must Pass
    All Things Must Pass
    Promo 0:27
    All Things Must Pass

    Fotos7

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    Topbesetzung22

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    Russ Solomon
    Russ Solomon
    • Self - Founder, Tower Records
    Michael Solomon
    • Self - Russ's Son
    Heidi Cotler
    Heidi Cotler
    • Self - VP of Operations, Tower Books
    Paul Brown
    • Self - Manager, Watt Avenue, Sacramento
    Stan Goman
    • Self - Chief Operating Officer, Tower Worldwide
    Steve Knopper
    • Self - Contributing Editor, Rolling Stone
    David Geffen
    David Geffen
    • Self - Founder, Geffen Records DGC
    Rudy Danzinger
    • Self - VP of Community Relations
    Mike Farrace
    • Self - VP of Marketing, Tower Partners
    Steve Nikkel
    • Self - VP of Worldwide Advertising
    Bruce Springsteen
    Bruce Springsteen
    • Self - Singer-Songwriter
    Mark Viducich
    • Self - Shipping & Receiving Clerk
    Ken Sockolov
    • Self - Store Clerk, Watt Avenue
    Dave Grohl
    Dave Grohl
    • Self - Store Clerk, Washington D. C.
    Bob Delanoy
    • Self - Stan's Neighbor
    Elton John
    Elton John
    • Self - Singer-Songwriter
    • (as Sir Elton John)
    Jim Urie
    • Self - Former President & CEO, Universal Music Group
    Patty Drosins
    • Self - Russ's Wife
    • (as Patti Drosins-Solomon)
    • Regie
      • Colin Hanks
    • Drehbuch
      • Steven Leckart
    • Komplette Besetzung und alle Crew-Mitglieder
    • Produktion, Einspielergebnisse & mehr bei IMDbPro

    Benutzerrezensionen27

    7,33.7K
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    Empfohlene Bewertungen

    6bonsai-superstar

    Karma At Work

    Unlikeable men fall into a CANNOT LOSE business (baby boomer, rock buying generation) and milk the customer dry for decades. Despite making millions, and eventually billions, this is not enough for these offensive parasites. These supposed "businessmen" (actually simple-minded drunkards and coke heads), fail to see digital coming and greedily refuse to offer their goods at reasonable prices. Now that these people are exposed for the lowlife scum that they are, they can only weep at the loss of their jobs (and at the loss of a fellow drunk, a gentleman who hilariously, literally wears a lampshade on his head. What a cutup! This, and the David Crosby / walrus-mustachioed Cletus are these people's idea of interesting people.

    Despite each working for decades, adding up to centuries worth of experience, in a music-related field, it is notable that music - remember music? - is never a discussion point for these selfish greed heads, only the good times they enjoyed and the incredible profit they were making, both at the customer's expense.

    Tower Records was a good store in spite of these people. Everyone loves music, all you needed to do was sell it to them at a reasonable price. See the Beatles' Apple Records for a similar example of what happens when you put burnt-out hippies in charge of your business. It's a shame alright, shameful actions.
    6Prismark10

    Put the needle on the record

    I recall being excited to visit the Tower Records store in LA in the mid 1990s on my first visit to the west coast of the USA. When I returned a decade later to their San Francisco store, it somehow felt less exciting, the store looked a little too ordinary and it seems they were having a fire sale on. A few months later Tower Records had gone bust.

    Colin Hanks documentary examines the growth of this record chain from its early years from founder's Russ Solomon's dad's drug store where he had a section which sold records.

    Russ took over the business in the 1960s, starting in the west coast and moving to the east coast and then internationally to Japan.

    As is the case, these heady years of the counterculture was a supposedly drug and drink fuelled hazy party for the staff (it always seem to be the case with maverick start ups.) Live hard and party hard was the motto. The staff I saw in the 1990s seemed to be mainly bored teenagers on minimum wage.

    At the turn of the millennium Tower Records was valued at $1 billion. Their seemed to be no end to its success and they were determined to sell albums, preferably CDs.

    The impact of online shopping was a body blow. The Apple Store allowed you to buy singles you wanted for 99 cents. Tower Records wanted you to buy the whole album for an ever increasing price and their online servers was on AOL.

    Even worse the young IT savvy consumer could now get music for free from Napster and other torrent sites. Combined with the company's debt laden expansion, choppy waters awaited them.

    The documentary interviews key staff from the early days as well as the man himself Russ Soloman who comes across as a charismatic maverick. We also get to hear from musicians such as Dave Grohl, Elton John and Bruce Springsteen about their joy in visiting the Tower Record stores, browsing, talking to aficionados. Elton admits he spent a fortune in their shops.

    The documentary was a bit messy, in fact a little overlong. We see a former executive being fired by a new management team and how Russ took him out for a meal after a Christmas party which bought him to tears. I wanted to know why he was fired, why he could not get another job, what happened after he went for a meal with Russ and then the same executive turns up later on when the attention shifts to the company's declining fortunes.

    In fact seeing some of the staff being interviewed I was impressed how they managed to become so big, it seemed to be more by serendipity than design.
    7ferguson-6

    No Music No Life

    Greetings again from the darkness. I do not envy those experiencing their childhood in this modern era. Sure, they have far superior electronics and hundreds more TV channels, but they also have very little independence (most can't even walk alone to a friend's house or a park) and they likely will never experience the pure joy of perusing the stacks at Tower Records (or any other record store) for hours … experiencing the thrill of discovering a new artist or style of music that rips into their soul. OK, I admittedly suffer from a touch of "old man" syndrome, but filmmaker Colin Hanks (yes, the actor and son of Tom) has delivered both a cozy trip down memory lane and a stark accounting of good times and bad at Tower Records.

    With humble beginnings as little more than a lark, Tower Records began when Russ Solomon's dad decided to sell used 45 rpm singles in his cramped Sacramento drug store. He bought the singles for 3 cents and sold them for 10 cents. Within a few years, Russ purchased the record business from his dad, and proceeded to run it as only a rebellious kid from the 1960's could. From 1960 through 2000, the business grew each year. It expanded the number of stores (peaking at 192 worldwide) and constantly adjusted to the musical tastes and the delivery method – 45's, LP's, cassettes, CD's, etc.

    Using some terrific photographs and video clips, accompanied by spot on music selections, director Hanks brilliantly and generously allows the actual players to tell the story. The expected celebrity drops are present, and even the words of David Geffen, Dave Grohl, Bruce Springsteen and Sir Elton John carry emotion. However, far and away the most impact comes from extended interviews with the unconventional and charismatic Tower Records founder Russ Solomon and his devoted and forthright employee team. Their sincere recollections provide the roadmap through the phenomenal growth, as well as the devastating end in 2006. We understand how these stores became so much more than retail outlets … they were cultural hotspots for at least two generations. We also learn some things we probably shouldn't … like the definition of "hand truck fuel", and the reason Russ installed hot lighting in the listening booths.

    Mr. Hanks surprises with his ability to balance nostalgia and the harsh realities of the downfall of an iconic cultural business. The film captures the key role Tower Records, while also pointing out that the crash was due to more than just Napster and digital music delivery. An interesting case study for business majors highlights the importance of vision vs debt. For more insight from Colin Hanks, check out the interview from film critic Chase Whale: http://www.hammertonail.com/

    "No Music. No Life". The motto of Tower Records was somehow inspirational, and fit perfectly for stores that featured mammoth album artwork on their store fronts, their own "Pulse" magazine, and staff that couldn't fathom life without music … much less wearing a suit and tie to work. This was truly "a chain of independent stores", and trust me when I tell you that hanging out at Tower Records was more fun than having hundreds of cable channels.
    7clarkj-565-161336

    Entrepreneurial Vision

    They call it luck, but it takes a particular type of wisdom to be at the right place at the right time. Russ Solomon had this in spades, when he branched out from his entrepreneurial father to expand into records. This movie is a blueprint of how to start a great business. First of all, have the vision. Secondly, get great people, give them freedom and back them up. Sounds simple, but very few businesses actually do this. In the movie, various key employees are interviewed and they all basically tell the same story. That is that they were given a chance to prove themselves and they rose to the challenge. Russ also realized that he could tap into the collective wisdom of all his employees and this he also did, especially with advertising and the Tower Records publication Pulse! It is refreshing to see the 60s again, the hope and the freedom. Russ also realized that he was not a financial type, so he hired an excellent money manager in Bud Martin. The demise of tower records was quite sad, but technology replaces one thing with another, so it was a tremendous ride.
    8subxerogravity

    More than a history of Tower Records but a history of the last 50 to 60 years of music.

    It's a great documentary, especially for those of us who remember a time before iTunes, when you had to go to a store to buy new music. It's very meaningful even for those like me who Tower Records was not the friendly neighborhood "supermarket" of music. I remember the Tower Records that was very close to me, but I went to another store, a store which probably had the same story (or at least the same ending to their story).

    Actor, Collin Hanks directs this documentary of the rise and fall of an important landmark in music history, from behind the scenes (as we all are most likely familiar with the surface of the story (especially it's end).

    The interviews and narrative take me back to the days when you could not download a single, and had to go into a store to buy an album. Watching footage of rows and rows of albums and CDs fills me with the memories.

    And the documentary truly points out what an interesting place Tower Records was and how interesting the people who worked there are, as they talk to people who were either there from the beginning or started out as a stock clerk at the original store and worked their way up to VP of something. It felt like the cool place you wish you had a job at.

    Especially if Foo Fighters front man Dave Grohl was a fellow Stock Clerk. He and Bruce Springstein and Sir Elton John told about their personal experiences at the store and showed their love for it.

    It seems so recent, but Tower Records is now just a part of music history. This doc did a good job of showing that history from beginning to end.

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    • Wissenswertes
      To promote the release of the film, the still empty building which once housed the Tower Records on Sunset Blvd. in West Hollywood had its facade repainted to appear as it once had. This led to rumors that the store may reopen, but in fact the building had been sold to Gibson Guitars in 2014 with the intention of opening a guitar showroom, while preserving the historic building itself. Not yet ready to open their showroom, Gibson worked with the documentary makers to repaint the building to display the Tower facade. The repaint was planned to be taken down after the premiere party was held inside the empty building, but remained up for over a year while Gibson continued to plan their new store.
    • Patzer
      In the closing credits the Japanese Translator, Kyoko Nishijima, is listed twice.
    • Zitate

      Dave Grohl, Himself: [Describing the cover of Nirvana's "Nevermind" LP] People went to great lengths. Like they'd get that weird foam and cardboard stuff and make a baby and there's a actual dollar bill dangling in front of it and it looks like water behind it. And, you know, when you would see people go to that much trouble for you, for your band, we were just, like, we were just shocked.

    • Verbindungen
      Referenced in Late Night with Seth Meyers: Carol Burnett/Colin Hanks/Baio/Abe Laboriel Jr. (2015)
    • Soundtracks
      Bless This Morning Year
      Written and Performed by Helios

      Courtesy of Unseen Music LLC.

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    FAQ16

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    Details

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    • Erscheinungsdatum
      • 16. Oktober 2015 (Vereinigte Staaten)
    • Herkunftsländer
      • Vereinigte Staaten
      • Japan
    • Offizielle Standorte
      • Official Facebook
      • Official Trailer
    • Sprache
      • Englisch
    • Auch bekannt als
      • All Things Must Pass
    • Drehorte
      • 8801 Sunset Blvd West Hollywood, Kalifornien, USA(Tower Records Sunset Blvd. location)
    • Produktionsfirmen
      • Company Name
      • Michaelgion
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    Box Office

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    • Bruttoertrag in den USA und Kanada
      • 172.394 $
    • Eröffnungswochenende in den USA und in Kanada
      • 19.001 $
      • 18. Okt. 2015
    • Weltweiter Bruttoertrag
      • 172.394 $
    Weitere Informationen zur Box Office finden Sie auf IMDbPro.

    Technische Daten

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      • 1 Std. 34 Min.(94 min)
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