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    Stoned (Unrated Widescreen Edition)
    Stoned (Unrated Widescreen Edition)

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    Director: Stephen Woolley
    Actors: Leo Gregory, Paddy Considine, David Morrissey, Ben Whishaw, Tuva Novotny
    Studio: Universal Studios
    Category: DVD

    List Price: $9.99
    Buy New: $4.11
    You Save: $5.88 (59%)



    New (36) Used (24) from $3.37

    Avg. Customer Rating: 3.0 out of 5 stars 36 reviews
    Sales Rank: 22109

    Format: Color, Dolby, Dvd-video, Subtitled, Widescreen, Ntsc
    Languages: English (Original Language), English (Subtitled)
    Rating: R (Restricted)
    Number Of Items: 1
    Running Time: 102
    Aspect Ratio: 1.85:1
    Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2
    Dimensions (in): 7.1 x 5.4 x 0.6

    MPN: 30568
    UPC: 025193056825
    EAN: 0025193056825
    ASIN: B000FDE5V2

    Theatrical Release Date: 2005
    Release Date: July 4, 2006
    Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
    Condition: Brand New and Factory Sealed Item Fast Shipping

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    Editorial Reviews:

    Product Description
    Director/Producer Stephen Woolley s STONED is a dramatic attempt--researched for 10 years--to accurately portray the controversial events surrounding the death of Rolling Stones founding member and guitarist Brian Jones at age 27 on July 2nd 1969. To create his work Woolley synthesized the written memoirs and testimonials of the witnesses who were there. Beginning a few months before Jones's death the film focuses on a relationship he forged with Frank Thorogood (Paddy Constantine) a builder hired to fix up the rock star's home. Alone--save for his girlfriend Anna--and ostracized from his band-mates due to drug problems and legal tangles Jones draws Thorogood in as a part-time friend and part-time assistant. When Jones is summarily fired from the band--only weeks before his demise--Thorogood is also let go and becomes jealous and enraged. Deftly placed flashbacks throughout the film catalog Jones's ascent and--more gratuitously--his drug-filled self-destructive descent. Coupling these with the volatile relationship with Thorogood the film discreetly shows the complex causes of Jones s untimely death. To capture the spirit of the times Woolley fills his soundtrack with 1960s nuggets including excellent covers of Stones material by modern British acts like A Band of Bees and Little Barrie. He also shoots the flashbacks and recreated concert footage with a hand-held 16mm camera achieving a real-life documentary feel. In this film Brian Jones and his unfortunate end (strangely ruled "death by misadventure" at the time) are cast further into the mythical and legendary status they have achieved--and deserved.System Requirements:Running Time 102 Mins.Format: DVD MOVIE Genre: DRAMA Rating: NR UPC: 025193056825 Manufacturer No: 30568

    Amazon.com
    Long since written off as "death by misadventure," the soggy demise of Rolling Stones founding member Brian Jones was in fact a considerably more sinister affair. At least that's what Stoned would have us believe. Director Stephen Woolley's 2005 film begins with the discovery of Jones' body at the bottom of his swimming pool in the summer of 1969, and while it jumps all over the place, chronologically speaking, it always comes back to the events leading up to that July night. As portrayed by Leo Gregory, the Jones we see in his final days is a drug- and drink-ridden wreck, utterly debauched, at once a misogynist who beats his girlfriend and a helpless child who can't bear to be alone; his contribution to the Stones now virtually nil, he barely notices when his bandmates show up to kick him out (the official line was that he quit). Enter Frank Thorogood (Paddy Considine), a local builder hired to fix up Jones' country manor (once owned by Winnie the Pooh creator A. A. Milne). Dour and dull, Frank is the perfect target for Jones' sardonic taunts ("You're fun to wind up," says Brian), and the movie posits the theory, supposedly supported by Thorogood's deathbed confession, that it all became too much for this simple country lad to take. Whether any or all of this is true seems almost inconsequential; many viewers won't even remember who Brian Jones was, and many others won't care. This unrated version is filled with sex and nudity (we see a good deal more of Jones', uh, tool than his guitar), and Woolley's style is hip and kinetic, as if he were trying to capture the swirling excitement of '60s England. Stoned is a bit muddled, sometimes cliched and often rather ridiculous (Jones in heaven, discussing his legacy? Hey, whatever), and it contains not a note of actual Rolling Stones music. But in a lurid kind of way, it's undeniably entertaining. --Sam Graham


    Customer Reviews:   Read 31 more reviews...

    5 out of 5 stars Brian Jones ROCKS!   August 30, 2008
    I quite frankly wasn't around when all this stuff happened, and got most of my information on swinging 60's England from Austin Powers and Absolutely Fabulous!
    I DID know that I liked the Stones early work WAY better than the stuff from the '70's on up and now I know why!
    BRIAN JONES!
    It was clearly his influence which caused the early Stones to Roll!
    I thought the leading man was adorable and brought a vulnerability and sweetness to the role.
    I can clearly see why Anita Pallenburg was later cast as the devil on Ab Fab!
    This movie has caused me to buy half a dozen books on the subject and taught me about a man and an era I knew very little about.
    BRIAN JONES LIVES!



    5 out of 5 stars Definitely Worthwhile for Any Stones Fan   July 12, 2008
     1 out of 1 found this review helpful

    I just watched this movie last night, and I was captivated by the story and the excellent performances. Yes, it is unfortunate that there is not Stones' music in the film. That would have enhanced the energy. But, still, the intensity of the times is well portrayed here, and I'm going to buy this disc for my "Sixties Music" library of films.

    I was 9 years old when Brian Jones died. We were on a family trip to Los Angeles, and I remember his drowning was HUGE news and universally perceived as a monumental tragedy. Even at 9 I loved the Rolling Stones and I was concerned about the impact Jones' death would have on future of the band. He may have been ejected from the group, but everyone had hoped and presumed they would reunite. Lots of people today seem to minimize Brian's influence on the band, but I think he was seminal in numerous respects. His distinctive imprint always has been and always will be on the band.

    Today, I have a 9 year-old daughter. I can not think of any single musician or band that has the same degree of significance or influence as did the 1969 Rolling Stones (except perhaps The Beatles or the 2008 Rolling Stones). Madonna or Sting, or any rapper, could die tomorrow and there would be only a very narrow slice of public reaction. But the Rolling Stones occupy a very profound place in musical and world history. The swath of admiration is vast, and their legacy is now going on five decades. The Stones have earned REAL respect, they aren't a cabaret act or a pop show. They are extremely talented musicians who have created the soundtrack for many of our lives. Even today's teens dig the Rolling Stones. Theirs is an astonishing story.

    This movie is clearly worthwhile as it gives us a sense of a vital aspect of that history. The band really has been a trinity, Jagger-Richards-Jones as the nucleus and the soul, and with Wood, Wyman, and Watts and all the rest as valuable collaborators and contributors over the decades. This movie tells us a lot about that missing third of the trinity. I thought all the performances were wonderful, and the imagery and general ambience of the movie is pretty much as I've always envisioned it.



    4 out of 5 stars Not As Bad As They Said   July 3, 2008
    Aside from missing a scene of Brian recording with the Stones and say, suddenly applying sitar or marimba to a track to display his multi-instrumental genius, "Stoned" pretty much sums up the turbulent times and short life of founding Rolling Stone Brian Jones.
    Leo Gregory lacks Brian's beauty but captures the louche decadence that Jones indulged in in his relationships, which in turn sent him into his personal spiral. Monet Mazur has a suitably smashing body (Sweet Jesus Those Nipples!) as Anita Pallenberg, the source of Brian's heartbreak, and the journey from playing slide on Little Red Rooster to the bottom of the pool at A.A. Milnes house is there for all to see.



    2 out of 5 stars I feel Stoned   February 10, 2008
    Sex, drugs and rock'n'roll, and the downward spiral all three can inspire.

    Brian Jones was the ultimate rock tragedy, dying young, rich and ruined by his own success and the loss of his lover. But the late Rolling Stones founder deserved a better biopic than "Stoned," which focuses on every part of Jones' life that is NOT interesting or insightful.

    The movie opens with two flashbacks -- Jones being confronted about a girl he got pregnant, and an early Stones show. Then it flips ahead several years to when builder Frank Thorogood (Paddy Considine) is being hired by soon-to-be-ex Rolling Stone Brian Jones (Gregory), to do work on his new mansion and the grounds surrounding it. Soon he's fascinated by the mercurial Jones.

    Jones himself is lost in memories of his glory days of drugs, sex, jetsetting and exotic music -- and especially his former lover Anita Pallenberg (Monet Mazur), who dumped him for his bandmate Keith (Ben Whishaw). He draws Thorogood into a dangerous game of hedonistic fun, until the degraded builder strikes back at him -- with tragic results.

    In theory, Jones was the ideal subject for a biopic -- he lived a short, colourful life full of drugs, art and sex. Perfect subjects for a wild movie. Too bad this movie is actually about Frank Thorogood.

    Unfortunately director Stephen Woolley doesn't seem to realize that nobody really cares about Thorogood, or why he murdered Jones. What people want is Jones -- tortured artist, forlorn child-man, girlfriend-beating sadist. Woolley provides brief glimpses ("You're fun to wind up") into Jones' psyche, but there's a lot more of Thorogood getting stoned, whining, and jumping on sleeping women.

    How did Jones start the Stones? How did fame and drugs change him? How did he deteriorate until his bandmates had to kick him out? Nope, don't expect answers. Instead we get about a hundred lingering shots of the swimming pool on Brian's estate -- thank you for that subtle foreshadowing, Mr. Woolley. We had almost forgotten that Jones drowned in the pool.

    In the end, "Stoned" is remarkable more for what it leaves out than for what it contains. Anita, those illegitimate kids, and Jones' musical skills are all sort of pushed to the side so we can see the big bad rock star mess with a country lad. And Woolley NEVER focuses on his relationship with the Stones. It's a shame, because the flashbacks to the Moroccan vacation are the most intense and colourful of the whole movie.

    Leo Gregory does a fairly good job with Jones' personality (too bad they look totally unalike). But star is Mazur as the dangerous, charismatic Anita; it's a shame the affair is basically dismissed as a longtime S&M romp. Whishaw and Luke de Woolfson deserve a special shout-out for their portrayals of Richards and Mick Jagger. Neither one has a lot of onscreen time, but they are utterly convincing.

    "Stoned" is full of moments that show what the movie could have been, and never was. Instead of a study of a brilliant, manipulative musician, we have a study of how he messed with his gardener. A limp, schizophrenic mess.



    5 out of 5 stars Stoned movie - A+   October 17, 2007
    This movie is a must have for any Brian Jones fan. It is european, and I had to watch it a couple of times to understand every word, but it is amazing! Leo Gregory IS Brian!


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