 | |
List Price: $19.95 | | Label: Mvd Visual
Salesrank: 66776
Released: August 3, 2004 |
| Our Price: $12.90 |
| Used Price: $7.98 |
|
MPAA Rating: NR (Not Rated) Media: DVD |
|
| Features:
Closed-captioned Color DVD-Video NTSC | |
Editorial Review:
This DVD includes exclusive and previously unseen film footage and in-depth interviews with those that worked closely with Hendrix during his career, including family members who have never spoken before, childhood friends, producers and other musicians.
By Those Who Knew Him Best Reviews:
An Avarice-Soaked Hoax 
2005-11-07 - Beware of this money-sucking stunt, "by those who knew him best." What a joke, even were this being offered for free.
Not one of Jimi's band-mates is interviewed, nor any of his closest and most beloved girlfriends, and most criminally, this so-called documentary leaves out the elegant, aristocratic Linda Keith, who falling in love with Jimi as well launched the chain of causes that made him into a star. The phrase "those who knew him best" is an outright lie.
What the film does unwittingly expose is the severity of the infestation of the leeches, users, and music-industry philistines (who bled Mr. Jimi and kept bleeding him onto death), who all then get a magical glint in their eyes recounting what "good friends" they were with a being who in ancient times would've been considered a Demi-God and who held onto his dignity, despite the forms of human life swarming and swamping him.
It's tragic the Hendrix Estate itself doesn't issue more footage, both musically and philosophically, but Ms. Janie
Hendrix afflicted with the Christian neurosis and ever-sprouting puritanical impulses is thereby incapable of telling the truth about her half-brother's personality and life, and is constantly trying to "clean up" his biography and fake his history: nothing needs to be "cleaned;" Jimi Hendrix had more nobility and humaneness than the Dali Lama, Pope, et al., and neither this cheap film, nor the Estate propaganda convey the character of Mr. Hendrix. Anyone who wants more insight into who he was would be better served by the interview included as an extra in the new (2005) Jimi at Woodstock Dvd, as well as the Film About Jimi Hendrix.
Jimi lives 
2005-03-15 - Interesting interviews with brother Leon, Mr. Mayer (effects wizard), and others that merely echo the common sentiment that when Hendrix died, everyone was VERY sad. An interesting statement was made by one of the interviewees that states "The day Hendrix died, Eddie Kramer was crying at Electric Ladyland Studios as were most of his colleagues. Musicians and fans were excited about having someone during their lifetime that they could follow and see where his music was going, he was that innovative" All Hendrix fans agree. Nuf said.