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Rewind This!

  • 2013
  • Not Rated
  • 1 घं 31 मि
IMDb रेटिंग
7.0/10
2.4 हज़ार
आपकी रेटिंग
Rewind This! (2013)
Documentary

अपनी भाषा में प्लॉट जोड़ेंHome video changed the world. The cultural and historical impact of the VHS tape was enormous. This film traces the ripples of that impact by examining the myriad aspects of society that wer... सभी पढ़ेंHome video changed the world. The cultural and historical impact of the VHS tape was enormous. This film traces the ripples of that impact by examining the myriad aspects of society that were altered by the creation of videotape.Home video changed the world. The cultural and historical impact of the VHS tape was enormous. This film traces the ripples of that impact by examining the myriad aspects of society that were altered by the creation of videotape.

  • निर्देशक
    • Josh Johnson
  • स्टार
    • Ben Jousan
    • David Gregory
    • Micah Matthews
  • IMDbPro पर प्रोडक्शन की जानकारी देखें
  • IMDb रेटिंग
    7.0/10
    2.4 हज़ार
    आपकी रेटिंग
    • निर्देशक
      • Josh Johnson
    • स्टार
      • Ben Jousan
      • David Gregory
      • Micah Matthews
    • 21यूज़र समीक्षाएं
    • 53आलोचक समीक्षाएं
  • IMDbPro पर प्रोडक्शन की जानकारी देखें
  • IMDbPro पर प्रोडक्शन की जानकारी देखें
    • पुरस्कार
      • 3 कुल नामांकन

    फ़ोटो26

    पोस्टर देखें
    पोस्टर देखें
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    पोस्टर देखें
    + 23
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    टॉप कलाकार65

    बदलाव करें
    Ben Jousan
    • Self - VHS Collector
    David Gregory
    • Self - Severin Films
    Micah Matthews
    • Self - ReeDistraction.com
    Mike Vraney
    Mike Vraney
    • Self - Something Weird Video
    Don May Jr.
    Don May Jr.
    • Self - Synapse Films
    Brian Kelley
    • Self - Home Video Aficionado
    Kelly-sue Calderon
    • Self - VHS Collector
    Joey Gravis
    • Self - VHS Collector
    Heather Hankamer
    • Self - Manager, Premiere Video
    Tommy Swenson
    • Self - Video Editor, Alamo Drafthouse
    Frank Henenlotter
    Frank Henenlotter
    • Self - Writer & Director, Basket Case
    Shôko Nakahara
    • Self - Actor, Visitor Q
    • (as Showko Nakahara)
    Tom Mes
    • Self - MidnightEye.com
    Dimitri Simakis
    • Self - Video Alchemist, Everything is Terrible
    Zack Carlson
    • Self - Author, Destroy All Movies
    Phil Blankenship
    • Self - Video Maniac
    Julia Marchese
    Julia Marchese
    • Self - New Beverly Cinema
    Paul 'Dormarth' Malleck
    • Self - VHS Horror Enthusiast
    • निर्देशक
      • Josh Johnson
    • सभी कास्ट और क्रू
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    उपयोगकर्ता समीक्षाएं21

    7.02.3K
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    फ़ीचर्ड समीक्षाएं

    Dethcharm

    Just Pop It In And Hit Play...

    REWIND THIS! takes us on a journey back to those days of yesteryear, when the video cassette was king. We join the experts as they relive the 1980's video rental craze. Interviews with luminaries like grindhouse Director Frank Henenlotter are intercut with VHS mega-collectors and their vast video tape and memorabilia collections.

    The evolution of the video phenomenon is tracked from its humble origins to the first piano-sized VCRs, and "mom and pop" video rental stores.

    This documentary also covers video trading, and the huge impact of the internet on physical video media. Thrill to interviews with Cassandra "Elvira" Peterson, Lloyd "Mr. Troma" Kaufman, Charles "Full Moon" Band, and others! Everything is chronicled, from horror to adult films, and beyond. Informative, nostalgic, and very entertaining...
    9StevePulaski

    Hard to call the medium dead

    I've always had a fondness for home media, the variety of formats that once existed, the obscure oddities one can find on VHS, and venturing through video stores and flea markets to make new discoveries. Because of this, I'm part of the obvious audience for Rewind This!, a delightful homage to the brilliant and once-ubiquitous home media that was VHS, and how its impact on the movie industry and the public is still prevalent today.

    Here's a film that will leave the devoted fans of VHS (like me) just wanting more. For the reason that I'm a huge supporter of the VHS-resurgence movement and continue to buy and collect the media, I'm going to try to make this review not sound like simple- minded fandom constructed into an essay. The film makes a bold attempt at trying to tackle everything VHS, from its meteoric rise, its unfathomable effect on the film industry as a whole, its fan, and its differences from its contemporaries. The documentary allows several people to make statements, some directors, some preservationists, some distributors (including the late Mike Vraney of Something Weird Video) but many the fans and supporters of the medium who rekindle their love for its simplicity and its immensity.

    VHS, to me, is such a unique way to watch film, mainly because of the primitiveness and sensitiveness of the device. With tape, there were many more issues that could arouse, with the worse case scenario it getting stuck in your player. But then there are the imperfections of the picture, such as the glitches, the occasional sloppiness of its appearance, the degradation of the tape when certain scenes are played too much, etc. Then there is the box art, which is a work of art in itself. A section of the film devotes itself to showing how unique and inventive the artwork to the VHS covers were, with them often being handpainted and meticulously put together rather than the depressing, effortless, digitized movie-covers/posters we're so used to today.

    Furthermore, the film shows how daring and unique home video really was at the time of its inception. Had it not been for an optimistic soul like Andre Ray, who worked for a video engineering company in the seventies, perhaps home video wouldn't have come around so quickly. Ray, who helped manufacturer videotapes at the time, wondered if you could put a full length movie on a certain size tape. When he discovered it was possible, he contacted several movie studios, hoping to get them to buy into the idea of consumers having their films to cherish and watch at their leisure. Few bought in, but one of them happened to be Fox (pre-Star Wars fame), who allowed them to put several of their classic titles on tape at roughly $80 - $90 a pop.

    Ray didn't even foresee the explosion of the rental industry, which simply came along because numerous people wanted a try-it-before-you-buy-it kind of system, simplifying the process of discovering a film for consumers even more. Oddly enough, that became the defining industry set forth by the home video boom. Nobody could foresee the industry taking off let the industry where people wander around a store swarmed with movies picking out whichever ones they wanted for a Friday night viewing.

    The film does a good job at articulating a question I had for a while and that is why were so many film distribution companies around during the inception of VHS that have since went on to disappear or go defunct in recent times. This is because of experimentation. When rental stores started popping up, they needed films to line their shelves. And thus, numerous distributors began popping up, inquiring quirky, often weird, experimental slashers or just asinine little gems to produce and help keep stores lined with inventory. Eventually, the studios took over and it became the big five or six companies calling all the shots.

    One subject that could've been explored much more in depth was the idea of cheap VHS bootlegging, which was done through magazine, handmade flyers, and communication via mail. People would make list of films they had that were either banned, rare, or out of print and would transfer them to blank tapes then smuggle them through the mail. However, due to some strict federal regulations, often times people would tape part of a TV show to play before the actual film to fool potential inspectors. Vraney talks about his experience as a bootlegger, as well as several others, but the revealing and now extinct process is a bit shortchanged and given maybe three to four minutes of attention.

    Rewind This! beautifully articulates obsession, impact, and legacy, and never drags or becomes boring, mainly because its subjects have so much insight and observations to offer. It's a must see for the obvious fans of the medium, but due to its commentary on an industry most all of us indulge in, it should almost be mandatory viewing.

    Directed by: Josh Johnson.
    8alisonc-1

    The History of Videotapes, Entertainingly Told

    "Rewind This!" is a documentary about VCRs, VHS tapes and the people who collect them. The story begins with the war between the Betamax and VCR formats, which of course the latter won despite the fact that Betamax was a far superior technology – but it could only play tapes of an hour or less, so any movie would need to be on more than one tape, a design flaw that killed it fairly quickly. Once VCR had won, people started discovering the joys of being able to watch movies at home, at the time of one's choosing – or at least they did once the price of the machine and the tapes (originally priced at $99!) came down. The film interviews a plethora of modern-day fans of the format (my personal favourite was a woman who organizes her tapes by the dominant colour of the box) as they describe falling in love with video, making home movies themselves and searching for old tapes at flea markets and the like – some collectors have over 100,000 of the clunky boxes! And, of course, the film includes a variety of scenes from videotapes, especially that genre of straight-to-video creations, which are a hoot to see. Definitely made me want to hunt up our old VHS tapes that are slowly rotting somewhere in the basement!
    7Sergeant_Tibbs

    Quirky reminder of a lost art.

    Oh the good ol' days of VHS. Yes, I wore my Disney videos down til they were just a fuzzy haze of grainy musical colours like everyone else, but my real relationship with cassettes comes from recorded movies from the TV guides. When I was first getting into film, I began my catchup with a big list of modern essentials such as Fight Club, Goodfellas, Full Metal Jacket, American Beauty, Pulp Fiction, all of which I watched and rewatched on video tape until I knew exactly where the advert breaks would come. That's essentially why I do what I do today. I never collected VHS like the subjects of this documentary, but ever since I got into DVD collecting, I've been manic. Blu-rays, books, vinyls, I collect 'em all. Although VHS is more or less useless these days (I remember the moment my player just decided to stop working, it was very irritating), I can definitely relate to the people in the film who scourer car boot sales obsessively for rarities.

    Rewind This! is a nostalgic reminder of why VHS deserved to be the best of their kind at the time. It's the same reason I like vinyl. They have a 'lived-in' quality we can't get from the polish of blu-ray. Little imperfections that are part of its unique identity where they've been over- paused and subsequently scarred with snowy lines of distortion. Although there's an almost Not Quite Hollywood focus on horror and porn as far as the 'hidden gems' go, it's a very interesting documentary. The film itself is well done, but admittedly, the industry professionals are far more interesting than the caricature hipsters who just really like videos. Definitely some colourful characters there on both sides. It does lack structure and its 8-bit music gives it an unwarranted sense of urgency that can be distracting, but it makes great use of cutaway footage from the video footage the subjects talk about. There's a great charm about its flaws and that kind of reflects its points about the authenticity and naivety on VHS. Worth watching.

    7/10
    10rockhaggis911

    Important. Quintessential.

    Simply put, I loved this documentary! Josh Johnson's ode to the VHS age, Rewind This! (2013) opens with a film enthusiast combing a flea market for VHS tapes, overflowing with the sort of passion any and all global VHS hunters (and film lovers) will immediately recognize. This image sets the tone. Like Not Quite Hollywood (2008) and Machete Maidens Unleashed! (2010) before it, Rewind This! will whet your appetite for rare films to add to your collection, but with the added bonus of causing you to scour the earth hunting for a VHS player the second you finish watching it. Powerful stuff, and a must see for film nuts everywhere! (my favorite moment is director Frank Henenlotter explaining the unique feature on his sublime horror comedy Frankenhooker's VHS box: press a button and hear a reanimated prostitute ask you "Wanna date?" This prompts a montage of several other VHS junkies explaining the same feature, and results in the sort of rush of recognition shared by enthusiasts across the world: I personally hit that damn button a million times with every visit to the video store!)

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    • भाव

      David 'The Rock' Nelson - Outsider Artist: I got ideas comin' outta my head, man, I'm 55! What's wrong with you guys sayin' you're old, when you're like my age, or younger! You're not old! Don't tell me, "Oh, I'm 48, I'm gettin' too old fer this." Man, you're just a kid! Get motivated! You know, some of you will say, "Oh, you gotta do it digitally." Yeah, digital schmidgital! I don't need a computer to make a movie, I never have! I just shoot the dang thing. If you got a video camera, stick a blank tape in that machine, and film the dang thing! Quit makin' excuses, "Well, I don't have all this money. I need a budget so I can buy all this digital equipment." Use what ya got! "Well I didn't go to film school, I don't know if my movies are gonna be good er not." Don't worry about it! Just listen to your heart and you do it! You take charge of your own vision! And don't worry what other people think! And don't let your mom talk you outta makin' monster movies! I told my mom, I said. My mom said, "David I wish you'd grow up, and do somethin' more constructive with your time!" I said, "Mom, you can't stop me from makin' movies, because you know I'm gonna do it anyway!"

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      Features La sortie de l'usine Lumière à Lyon (1895)

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    साइन इन करें

    अक्सर पूछे जाने वाला सवाल14

    • How long is Rewind This!?Alexa द्वारा संचालित

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    बदलाव करें
    • रिलीज़ की तारीख़
      • 27 अगस्त 2013 (यूनाइटेड स्टेट्स)
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    Rewind This! (2013)
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