Count Me In
- 2021
- 1h 21min
CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
6.8/10
2.4 k
TU CALIFICACIÓN
Puedes tener ritmo sin música, pero no puedes tener música sin ritmo.Puedes tener ritmo sin música, pero no puedes tener música sin ritmo.Puedes tener ritmo sin música, pero no puedes tener música sin ritmo.
- Dirección
- Guionistas
- Elenco
Ginger Baker
- Self
- (material de archivo)
Art Blakey
- Self
- (material de archivo)
The Clash
- Themselves
- (material de archivo)
The Damned
- Themselves
- (material de archivo)
Deep Purple
- Themselves
- (material de archivo)
Dire Straits
- Themselves
- (material de archivo)
Eurythmics
- Themselves
- (material de archivo)
The Human League
- Themselves
- (material de archivo)
Iron Maiden
- Themselves
- (material de archivo)
- Dirección
- Guionistas
- Todo el elenco y el equipo
- Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro
Opiniones destacadas
The documentary went through a timeline of drummers in chronological order, paying the right amount of respect to every drummer that it covered, starting with the old jazz greats before shifting gear into Rock specific territory for the rest of its run time. Ringo Starr, Charlie Watts, Keith Moon, John Bonham and Roger Taylor, right up to Dave Grohl. Everyone you'd expect is touched on... Except Neil Peart, which frankly I just don't understand, especially with him passing away only last year. Anyone who knows Rock n Roll would count him as a top 5 drummer, he is every bit as influential and inspiring to young drummers as any of the others covered, in fact more so than most. It really seems like he was deliberately omitted for some reason and they could've easily squeezed him in, especially when Keith Moon is covered TWICE, and there's a kinda forced feministy bit at the end with drummers that... be honest... no one has really heard of. They at least could have talked about Meg White for that part, a female drummer who is a respected household name, and another pretty egregious omission, especially during the girl power bit. So yeah, I enjoyed it, and it wasn't a bad documentary, I would recommend it, but omitting Peart is like omitting Eddie Van Halen from a doc about guitarists.
How can you not mention Neil Peart or Danny Carey among many others. Kind of disappointing. Several of the drummers they spoke to may be well respected but not very well known and certainly not in the top. Disappointed and sad.
Just to make sure the makers of this documentary get it loud and clear, I'm going to knowingly echo the other reviewers.
I enjoyed this documentary but it lost a lot of credibility by omitting Neil Peart, considered by most rock fans and all industry magazines as one of the top two or three greatest drummers of all time. His estate might have restricted use of footage but IP laws don't prohibit talking about someone. Wow!
Some of the negative reviews miss the point. This is a great doc with a dozen or so great drummers explaining their history, their love, their sheer joy of the art of tub thumping. It' s not meant to be a history or drumming, but
references the influences and heros of 50 years. It's a live story to drums and drummers.
If you live percussion then watch it. If you ae expecting a definitive list of the greats, then it's not for you. But for what it is, It's great fun and I loved it.
Drummers across.
If you live percussion then watch it. If you ae expecting a definitive list of the greats, then it's not for you. But for what it is, It's great fun and I loved it.
Drummers across.
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaThe opening drum circle was filmed at Mount Wilson Observatory, 5,715 feet above Los Angeles.
- ConexionesFeatures The Benny Goodman Story (1956)
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- How long is Count Me In?Con tecnología de Alexa
Detalles
- Tiempo de ejecución
- 1h 21min(81 min)
- Color
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