Wattstax Reviews
All [the performers] draw lively reactions from the crowd who get to chant, "I am somebody." And isn't that all what we want to be?
| Original Score: 3/4 | Dec 18, 2020
It is a fine documentary in that it does, better than any popular music film with the possible exception of Woodstock, document a group of people, their music, how it came to be, and why they like it.
| Dec 18, 2020
This is a fragmented, skittery film that does not have enough moments of interest and hilarity to offset the stretches of boredom.
| Dec 18, 2020
Just when you figure that the film industry has exhausted every possible avenue of exploration in the quest to present still another music festival documentary, along comes something with a nice, fresh twist. Such is the case with Wattstax.
| Dec 18, 2020
Once In a while, a muslc-oriented film can transcend the ordinary and become a chronicle of a social mood instead of an on-film record of a concert. It was that way with Monterey Pop and Woodstock; it Is that way with WATTSTAX.
| Dec 18, 2020
It's a rich tapestry incorporating documentary footage -- the '65 riots, interviews with Watts residents talking about being black in America -- that puts its musical performances (staged by Melvin Van Peebles) in a broad social context.
| Dec 18, 2020
Richard Prvor, the satirist, is very funny; Rufus [Thomas is] a joy to behold in outrageous pink shorts and cloak.
| Dec 18, 2020
Stuart uses the music as an expression of common feeling, and he intercuts concert footage with interview material... The result is necessarily superficial, but it does give the people a voice, and the tone is insistent and important.
| Dec 18, 2020
The cinema-verite material is very cunningly incorporated with the festival coverage of many major black rock activities to make an overall rhythmic pat- tern full of life and vigour.
| Dec 18, 2020
The swaggering "Theme From Shaft" fades into the unsparingly sad state-of-the-community number "Soulsville," beautifully summing up what's come before.
| Dec 18, 2020
There isn't enough music, but Stax have at least had the wit to hire Richard Pryor to deliver one of his characteristic monologues (the rest of the time is filled out by chats with the denizens of Watts). Much good music all the same.
| Dec 18, 2020
Wattstax is a technical treat, with good sound, recording adding to the flavor of the music.
| Jul 16, 2005
Full Review | Original Score: 4/5 | Sep 16, 2004
The restored rerelease is a time capsule of Afros, anger and attitude.
| Original Score: 3/4 | Sep 5, 2003
Rarely has a concert -- or a concert film -- been so shaped by its social context. Wattstax was both the definitive record of popular music circa 1972 and a say-it-loud statement of black aspirations.
| Original Score: 3.5/4 | Jul 3, 2003
It just has the air of something too carefully laid out in advance. It's so busy being glossy and optimistic that it doesn't even allow its performers time to create on screen a measure of the excitement they might have created in person.
| Jun 7, 2003
A candid, colorful and deeply meaningful sociocultural time capsule.
| Jun 6, 2003
A recording of a historic moment, Wattstax has considerable value.
Full Review | Original Score: 3/4 | Jun 6, 2003
A disorienting and ironic moviegoing experience.
| Original Score: 3/4 | Jun 6, 2003
A remarkably penetrating documentary.
| Jun 5, 2003