THE QUIET ONE offers a unique, never before revealed and behind-the-scenes look at the highs and lows of the life and career of Bill Wyman, former, founding member of the Rolling Stones and ... Read allTHE QUIET ONE offers a unique, never before revealed and behind-the-scenes look at the highs and lows of the life and career of Bill Wyman, former, founding member of the Rolling Stones and renaissance man of rock and roll.THE QUIET ONE offers a unique, never before revealed and behind-the-scenes look at the highs and lows of the life and career of Bill Wyman, former, founding member of the Rolling Stones and renaissance man of rock and roll.
Mick Jagger
- Self
- (archive footage)
Brian Jones
- Self (archive)
- (archive footage)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
While this would be a must see for fans of the Rolling Stones, others who have interest in the rock era will find this film fascinating. It's a thoughtfully produced documentary providing great insight into Bill Wyman, the person, the musician, and the times that had an influence on him. Of course there is a treasure trove of background into what made this great band tick.
THE QUIET ONE (2019)
I've been a fan of The Rolling Stones music my whole life; I didn't know much about bass guitarist Bill Wyman until now.
Rather than being a documentary filled with close-ups of talking heads and jammed with concert footage, this is a beautiful life journey about Bill with his own words. I'm touched by the humility and groundedness he retained in a life that began roughly in war torn London, wandering through rubble from the blitz in WWII. He was raised by a grandmother that he revered. Born William Perks, Jr., he was so at odd with his non-supportive father, he shucked his last name and took the surname Wyman from a man he admired in the service.
This film somehow reminds me of oragami; it unfolds to reveal a 3D image. Bill sits in a room surrounded by his stuff, an astounding archive, a capsule of his life. He had a computer before anyone else, he took tons of photos of his life, including his thirty-one years with The Stones. His memories, things he meticulously collected his whole to life to record, catalogue, and remember fill his home attic. He kept a journal since he was a kid. In this movie we get to see snippets of the memorabilia; I would love to be able to wander through this Bill Wyman museum.
A founding member of the greatest rock and roll band of all time, Wyman had an anti-drug stance. In the press he got coverage for having a reputation with women, but this film wasn't about that, and I didn't need it to be. Here, layers of the onion are peeled back, and the reveal is lovely.
There are moments in this film, such as when Bill describes his meeting with Ray Charles with such tenderness, respect, and awe, I was moved to tears. I recommend this film to anyone, even if you're not a fan of the music. It's a great character study of a man well worth getting to know.
I've been a fan of The Rolling Stones music my whole life; I didn't know much about bass guitarist Bill Wyman until now.
Rather than being a documentary filled with close-ups of talking heads and jammed with concert footage, this is a beautiful life journey about Bill with his own words. I'm touched by the humility and groundedness he retained in a life that began roughly in war torn London, wandering through rubble from the blitz in WWII. He was raised by a grandmother that he revered. Born William Perks, Jr., he was so at odd with his non-supportive father, he shucked his last name and took the surname Wyman from a man he admired in the service.
This film somehow reminds me of oragami; it unfolds to reveal a 3D image. Bill sits in a room surrounded by his stuff, an astounding archive, a capsule of his life. He had a computer before anyone else, he took tons of photos of his life, including his thirty-one years with The Stones. His memories, things he meticulously collected his whole to life to record, catalogue, and remember fill his home attic. He kept a journal since he was a kid. In this movie we get to see snippets of the memorabilia; I would love to be able to wander through this Bill Wyman museum.
A founding member of the greatest rock and roll band of all time, Wyman had an anti-drug stance. In the press he got coverage for having a reputation with women, but this film wasn't about that, and I didn't need it to be. Here, layers of the onion are peeled back, and the reveal is lovely.
There are moments in this film, such as when Bill describes his meeting with Ray Charles with such tenderness, respect, and awe, I was moved to tears. I recommend this film to anyone, even if you're not a fan of the music. It's a great character study of a man well worth getting to know.
This film is exceptional telling the story of the life of Rolling Stones bass player Bill Wyman. I loved the way they narrated and edited it with real life video and pictures dating back to his childhood. Apparently Wyman kept most everything he acquired or filmed throughout his life. And they used much of it making this. They put it all together telling a memorable account of his life with his band mates, friends, mentors and especially other musicians who helped shape his musical thinking. Nothing was done in a salacious way. Instead it was straight forward non-fictional story telling that left you wanting more at the end.
My only complaint was that it was too short. I wanted more. I highly recommend this.
My only complaint was that it was too short. I wanted more. I highly recommend this.
10cavtrpr
I've been a fan of the "Rolling Stones" ever since the early sixties. Strange as it seems I'd never really paid that much attention to
Bill Wyman considering I'm also a bassist. I knew he played good solid bass but I was always more drawn to the much more flamboyant
Mick Jagger and Keith Richard. This movie gave me a whole new perspective on the band and a complete respect for Bill Wyman. He's the
one I should have been listening to. His wisdom is really refreshing and he pulls no punches even when the truth is very painful. I will be buying a copy of this movie for my collection. It really is that good.
Terrific, lovely doc from one of the original Rolling Stones...only complaint: it should have been longer...he must have several worthy films in that archive of his...
Details
Box office
- Gross US & Canada
- $37,010
- Opening weekend US & Canada
- $7,695
- Jun 23, 2019
- Gross worldwide
- $37,010
- Runtime
- 1h 38m(98 min)
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.85 : 1
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