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Rolling Stones: At the Max

Rolling Stones: At the Max

1991Movie⏱️ 1h 29m
DocumentaryMusic
7.6
IMDB Rating
502 votes

A filming of the 1990 Rolling Stones "Steel Wheels" concert that traveled Europe. This was filmed in the IMAX process, which allows the film to be projected in a size ten times the size of a regular 35mm projected image.

Director
N/A
Writers
N/A
Stars
Mick Jagger, Keith Richards, Charlie Watts
Release Date
June 16, 1992
Language
English
Country
Ireland, Canada, United States
💬 6
Reviews
📽️ View on IMDB

🎭 Top Cast

Mick Jagger
Mick Jagger
as Self
Keith Richards
Keith Richards
as Self
Charlie Watts
Charlie Watts
as Self
Ronnie Wood
Ronnie Wood
as Self
Bill Wyman
Bill Wyman
as Self
👤
Chuck Leavell
as Self (Keyboards)
Bobby Keys
Bobby Keys
as Self (Saxophone)
👤
Crispin Cioe
as Self (Uptown Horns)
👤
Arno Hecht
as Self (Uptown Horns)
👤
Hollywood Paul Litteral
as Self (Uptown Horns)

💰 Box Office

$15,375
Worldwide Gross

🎬 Technical Specs

Aspect Ratio
1.44 : 1
Sound
IMAX 6-Track
Sound
Dolby Digital
Color
Color
Filming Location
Berlin, Germany
Production
IMAX, Promotour USA, The BCL Group

🏷️ Keywords

rolling stonesimaxconcert film

🎯 Categories

DocumentaryMusic

⭐ Featured Review

Good Concert with Nice Reworked Songs
by Michael_Elliott2011-02-21

"Rolling Stones: At the Max (1991) *** (out of 4) Filmed during the European leg of the Stones' 1990 Steel Wheels tour, this production was shot for the IMAX screens so obviously seeing it there compared to your television is going to make a lot of different but I've always felt that no matter how you see it you need a strong performance, which you get here, although at the same time I'd say this concert isn't nearly the best that the group has released and certainly doesn't come close to what Martin Scorsese would pull off with SHINE A LIGHT. Start Me Up/ Sad Sad ..."

💡 Did You Know?

The first feature length film ever to be filmed in IMAX format.

📖 Synopsis

A filming of the 1990 Rolling Stones "Steel Wheels" concert that traveled Europe. This was filmed in the IMAX process, which allows the film to be projected in a size ten times the size of a regular 35mm projected image.