Aggiungi una trama nella tua linguaA Hollywood film company wants to make a movie about country music and sends Doodles Weaver to round up talent to appear. A host of then-current country stars perform their hits.A Hollywood film company wants to make a movie about country music and sends Doodles Weaver to round up talent to appear. A host of then-current country stars perform their hits.A Hollywood film company wants to make a movie about country music and sends Doodles Weaver to round up talent to appear. A host of then-current country stars perform their hits.
- Regia
- Sceneggiatura
- Star
The Stoneman Family
- Themselves
- (as The Stonemans)
Donna Stoneman
- Self
- (as The Stonemans)
Kitty Wells
- Self (singer)
- (as Kitty Wells Show)
Recensioni in evidenza
This movie was a Big Deal when it came to the drive in in Long Beach CA. Lots of happy viewers. We had heard the musicians on records but it was so nice to be able to see them.
Movie studio head Richard Arlen sends Doodles Weaver to Nashville to Nashville to choose acts for the country music movie they're making next week. Lots of stars lip-sync to their hits, form the Stoneman Family to the Carter Family -- who owe a lot of their success to Pop Stoneman discovering them -- who sing "I Walk the Line" and then back up Johnny Cash on a spiritua --l to contemporary acts like Connie Smith. Wherever the songs were actually recorded, about half of the 38 songs are about adultery, and almost every performance has a lot of echo.
The quality of the performances are pretty good, echo aside, and there's some fine banjo picking, and even an electric mandolin. At over 100 minutes, that's too many C&W songs for me, but fans of the genre will be pleased.
The quality of the performances are pretty good, echo aside, and there's some fine banjo picking, and even an electric mandolin. At over 100 minutes, that's too many C&W songs for me, but fans of the genre will be pleased.
7tavm
Surrounded by a thin plot in which Doodles Weaver (a relative of Sigorney Weaver) plays agent Colonel Feetlebaum trying to get the biggest Country music stars for a movie, The Road to Nashville has nearly two hours of just that with among them: Waylon Jennings, Dottie West, Hank Snow, Porter Wagoner, The Carter Family, and Johnny Cash. Oh, and the one above the title, Marty Robbins, sings the most songs here including his classic "El Paso". Highlights for me include Snow's "I've Been Everywhere" which I've heard Cash sing for a commercial not to mention Rick Moranis using the melody for his own version called "I Ain't Going Nowhere", the numbers of Jennings and Wagoner, and hearing the Carters sing Cash's "I Walk the Line" just before they and Johnny segue to "Were You There". It's also interesting to see June Carter talk between those numbers before future husband Johnny takes the stage. Oh, and about Doodles: his spots are alternately amusing and lame though I did like his parody of "Home on the Range". So on that note, The Road to Nashville is worthy of a look for anyone interested in this rare filmed musical revue.
This a a really fun little slice of 1966 Nashville, great for those of us who like that stuff--some greats at various stages, and a family act that makes me think the rural methamphetamine craze might have started earlier than we thought. But there is also a true gem here. Before bringing out Johnny Cash for a gospel song and another little tune (a real disappointment when you think of what they could have used in this spot--'Ring of Fire' comes to mind), the Carter Family women, June, Anita, Helen, and Mother Maybelle, do a version of 'Walk the Line.' The song itself is a beautiful treat, but June's and Johnny's comments afterward, during this time a couple of years before they married, show some interesting emotion. June's words could be taken to slightly deride the song they've just performed.
Road to Nashville is to all intents and purposes a showcase for a selection of country music stars with an extremely flimsy plot that merely takes us from A to B allowing for song after song to be performed. For what it's worth, the story has Doodles Weaver being sent to Nashville to recruit musicians and singers to star in an upcoming movie about country music. But as I say, this is a virtually plot less affair which is aimed squarely at fans of this type of music.
I'm not really much of a fan of the genre myself, so much of the songs I didn't get too much out of. But there were some that did standout for me. The Carter Family sing a song synonymous with Johnny Cash, namely 'Walk the Line', only to then be joined by him for an emotional number entitled 'Were You There'. In this segment his future wife June Carter talks a little between the numbers too. But perhaps the real standout for me was a group I had hitherto never even heard of, The Stoneman Family. They knock out three numbers and the two women in the group easily provide the most energy and distinctive performances in the whole film. Their first song is a crazy up-tempo workout with a pretty maniacal mandolin being played in almost free-style by one of the women; in their final number the other girl takes over and knocks out some serious banjo action while maintaining an intentionally deadpan face the whole time. So, The Stoneman Family? Yeeha!
This film is ultimately a real treat for country and western fans, especially of the mid 60's variety. Some of these artists were very rarely filmed playing their songs, so it serves as a pretty cool document in that sense too. It's not in all honesty really aimed at someone like me who is pretty lukewarm on the genre but I still did get a kick out of some of it nevertheless.
I'm not really much of a fan of the genre myself, so much of the songs I didn't get too much out of. But there were some that did standout for me. The Carter Family sing a song synonymous with Johnny Cash, namely 'Walk the Line', only to then be joined by him for an emotional number entitled 'Were You There'. In this segment his future wife June Carter talks a little between the numbers too. But perhaps the real standout for me was a group I had hitherto never even heard of, The Stoneman Family. They knock out three numbers and the two women in the group easily provide the most energy and distinctive performances in the whole film. Their first song is a crazy up-tempo workout with a pretty maniacal mandolin being played in almost free-style by one of the women; in their final number the other girl takes over and knocks out some serious banjo action while maintaining an intentionally deadpan face the whole time. So, The Stoneman Family? Yeeha!
This film is ultimately a real treat for country and western fans, especially of the mid 60's variety. Some of these artists were very rarely filmed playing their songs, so it serves as a pretty cool document in that sense too. It's not in all honesty really aimed at someone like me who is pretty lukewarm on the genre but I still did get a kick out of some of it nevertheless.
Lo sapevi?
- QuizOf the 38 songs performed in this movie, 1 is an instrumental piece, 1 is a travel song, 2 are happy love songs, 2 are gospel songs, 4 are novelty songs, and 17 are about adultery. The remainder revolve around things like abandonment, depression, poverty, alcoholism, imprisonment, endless labour, general misery, and death (some of which also figure in many of the songs about adultery).
- Citazioni
Colonel Feetlebaum: You cross a bee with a doorbell, you get a humdinger.
- ConnessioniFeatured in Close Encounters with Vilmos Zsigmond (2016)
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Dettagli
- Tempo di esecuzione1 ora 49 minuti
- Mix di suoni
- Proporzioni
- 2.35 : 1
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By what name was The Road to Nashville (1967) officially released in India in English?
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