First Look: Psychedelic Taking Woodstock Movie Poster


Behold, the psychedelic brand-new movie poster for director Ang Lees upcoming film Taking Woodstock. Combining the aesthetics of a spilled lava lamp with artist Wes Wilsons famed 1960s posters for San Franciscos legendary Fillmore, the tagline reads A Generation Began In His Backyard, alluding to Elliot Tiber, the focus of the film.

As Rock Daily wrote when the films trailer debuted, Taking Woodstock tells the true story of Tiber, played by comedian Demetri Martin, who helps organizer Michael Lang secure a concert permit in order to stage the iconic 1969 music festival in upstate New York. Martins character gets waylaid by an acid trip and a three-way, producer James Schamus told Rolling Stone. The film also features Emile Hirsch, Liev Schreiber, Watchmens Jeffrey Dean Morgan, Paul Dano, Imelda Staunton and Eugene Levy as Max Yasgur, whose farmland became the stage for Woodstock. The film which has its own Facebook hub hits theaters August 14th.

This year marks the 40th anniversary of the original Woodstock festival, and to celebrate Rolling Stone is digging into the archives to resurrect our original coverage of the 1969 fest. Today, we present writer Greil Marcus review of the Woodstock festival from the September 20th, 1969 issue of Rolling Stone. From the eight-mile, quarter-million car traffic jam to the festival to the rain-soaked set by Country Joe & the Fish to performances by Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young and Jimi Hendrix, Marcus and the intrepid Rolling Stone crew braved the elements, dealers and overpopulation to report back from Yasgurs Farm.

The rain had been coming down for a long time now, but it seemed safe, and the stage crew put on a record. Creedence Clearwaters Born on the Bayou went soaring out of the great sound system and over the enormous crowd and suddenly the Battle of the Bands of the night before had turned into American Bandstand, Marcus wrote. Three hundred thousand people jumped up cut of the mud and started to dance. Bopping their bodies and shaking their hair to the beat, hopping over and into the new puddles of garbage and mud. The crush of more than a quarter of a million people sitting down had been some sight, but this was almost more than anyone could believe.

For the rest of Marcus Woodstock experience, check out his story:

From the Archives: The Woodstock Festival

Related Stories:

Trailer for Ang Lees Anticipated Taking Woodstock Debuts
Producer James Schamus Says Ang Lees Taking Woodstock Will Capture Hopeful Spirit
Report: Woodstock 09 In the Works To Celebrate 40th Anniversary of 1969 Festival

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