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-   -   Trainwreck: Woodstock '99 (Netflix) premieres 8/3/22 (https://forum.dvdtalk.com/tv-talk/655849-trainwreck-woodstock-99-netflix-premieres-8-3-22-a.html)

Decker 08-04-22 10:22 PM

re: Trainwreck: Woodstock '99 (Netflix) premieres 8/3/22
 
I don't follow. Are you saying that there was a pre-existing version of this series that included that story and Netflix edited it out, or are you saying that they just never mentioned it in this series?

Why So Blu? 08-05-22 12:44 PM

re: Trainwreck: Woodstock '99 (Netflix) premieres 8/3/22
 

Originally Posted by Decker (Post 14143206)
I don't follow. Are you saying that there was a pre-existing version of this series that included that story and Netflix edited it out, or are you saying that they just never mentioned it in this series?


Yes, the first part. Unless I'm mistaken and the doc that aired on HBO first isn't this one that aired on Netflix:

https://www.hbo.com/movies/woodstock-99-peace-love-rage

Some of the very exact ground and footage was used in what looked to be verbatim. Even the interviews with the same folks are identical

Decker 08-05-22 11:06 PM

re: Trainwreck: Woodstock '99 (Netflix) premieres 8/3/22
 
They are completely different documentaries. Different director and crew. Just covering the same material.
Woodstock 99 Peace Love and Rage
And
Trainwreck : Woodstock 99

SmackDaddy 08-06-22 07:15 AM

re: Trainwreck: Woodstock '99 (Netflix) premieres 8/3/22
 
I was aware of Woodstock 99 but that lineup was of no interest, so I didn't really pay attention to any of it. But wow, the organizers were delusional. That MTV interview with them during the festival, what kind of blinders did they have on? Then the press conference, sheesh..."Only about 50 knucklheads..." causing all that trouble. Yeah, ok. What a group of a-holes (Lang was delusional to the end apparently).

Bluelitespecial 08-06-22 07:51 AM

re: Trainwreck: Woodstock '99 (Netflix) premieres 8/3/22
 
When I made the first post I could of swore the title was called Cluster***k. Maybe it was changed at the last minute.

Why So Blu? 08-06-22 06:09 PM

re: Trainwreck: Woodstock '99 (Netflix) premieres 8/3/22
 

Originally Posted by Decker (Post 14143733)
They are completely different documentaries. Different director and crew. Just covering the same material.
Woodstock 99 Peace Love and Rage
And
Trainwreck : Woodstock 99

Then the first one there covers the death of the young man. The second one does not.

kahuna 08-08-22 05:08 PM

re: Trainwreck: Woodstock '99 (Netflix) premieres 8/3/22
 
I wonder how many women ended up pregnant or had to get a abortion because they went to this Cluster***k: Woodstock '99? :(

BuckNaked2k 08-08-22 08:10 PM

re: Trainwreck: Woodstock '99 (Netflix) premieres 8/3/22
 
I watched all three episodes over the weekend and really enjoyed it. That was definitely not my scene, having aged out of the popular culture about a decade earlier. I remember being offered free tix and a ride, but had no interest in going. Glad I took a pass.

Josh-da-man 08-08-22 08:44 PM

re: Trainwreck: Woodstock '99 (Netflix) premieres 8/3/22
 
They should have titled this OK Boomer instead of Trainwreck.

Inhumans99 08-09-22 11:04 AM

re: Trainwreck: Woodstock '99 (Netflix) premieres 8/3/22
 
Is it odd that I find myself shaking my head at the folks trying to blame the musical acts like Limp Bizkit and Red Hot Chili Peppers for the complete and chaotic breakdown of Woodstock 99? As someone said in the second or third episode of the docu series (I got sucked into watching it all last night), blaming Limp Bizkit is like being angry at a bear for acting like a bear. Many of these new metal/rock/etc. type acts seem to have put everything they had into providing an entertaining set for the audience. Kudos to that, the pampered artists were not the problem.

I am curious as to why the organizers of this event did not do any jail time. The mud mixed in with the sewage from the porta potties, so gross. Also, all of the cat calls towards the woman attendees and even the female musical acts to show us your tits, jeebus, I am slightly embarrassed to be part of the same species as those knuckleheads in the docu series. The woman who was raped in the van, all of the women who were basically assaulted as they crowd-surfed, and then to hear one of the attendees that helped narrate the docu series say on camera when she was young that she would attend another Woodstock event, yeesh.

In 1999 I was about 27/28 years old, so maybe I would have still been in the age bracket that would have gravitated towards this event but for a variety of reasons I never got the itch to attend something like this music festival and thank goodness for that.

Yeah, Michael Lang was criminally delusional about how Woodstock 99 ultimately sorted itself out.

3 days under broiling heat and they took away folks water bottles and charged at least $4 for water, if the audience was a bunch of boomers who could afford overpriced concert tickets to see an act that was big in the 80s/90s (or earlier decades) that is touring today in a fancy arena, okay...$4 for water now or then is still ridiculous but I get that certain venues can get away with being greedy, but during the Woodstock 99 event the lack of water was beyond dangerous for the folks that attended and for an event that was supposed to be about peace and love and kindness towards your fellow beings the greed on display by the folks responsible for concessions is not what you expect to experience at Woodstock.

Finally, the lack of security (Peace patrol, what a joke), the lack of folks emptying out/replacing the porta potties on a regular basis, and no one dealing with the trash, whiskey, tango, foxtrot. Throw 250,000 thousand folks onto the hot tarmac, and just ignore that they are going to generate a lot of waste (biological/paper goods), and need lots of hydration, seriously, what the hell.


Michael Corvin 08-09-22 11:34 AM

re: Trainwreck: Woodstock '99 (Netflix) premieres 8/3/22
 
Finished last night. Pretty entertaining.

I'm not one that would have partaken in the destruction but I will say the organizers got what they deserved. Delusional fuckwits.

Do we know how much they raked in? I wanted a follow up question to the guy that downplayed what he made because of the chaos. Ask him how much he made AFTER Woodstock 99 on merch and media.

ViewAskewbian 08-09-22 11:35 AM

re: Trainwreck: Woodstock '99 (Netflix) premieres 8/3/22
 

Originally Posted by Inhumans99 (Post 14145152)
Is it odd that I find myself shaking my head at the folks trying to blame the musical acts like Limp Bizkit and Red Hot Chili Peppers for the complete and chaotic breakdown of Woodstock 99? As someone said in the second or third episode of the docu series (I got sucked into watching it all last night), blaming Limp Bizkit is like being angry at a bear for acting like a bear. Many of these new metal/rock/etc. type acts seem to have put everything they had into providing an entertaining set for the audience. Kudos to that, the pampered artists were not the problem.

Yeah, I've never really blamed the bands themselves though I also don't really buy the RHCP saying it was a coincidence they played fire while the fires were raging (though I gather there is some truth to them having said they were playing out after talks with the Hendrix family as a tribute). As for Limp Bizkit playing Break Stuff and the crowd going bonkers...really, that's on the crowd and from even Day 1 the writing was on the wall on where a lot of the idiots attending were going. The heat, food/water prices, etc. propelled an already jacked up crowd. The Korn set was an indication though Bush did well to bring the group back down. By day 2 though there wasn't much turning back.

I recently was front row at Rage Against the Machine and it was one of the most intense shows I've ever seen...in a good way. The crowd was jacked but not violent. There was the usual crowd surfing (including a guy in a wheel chair that came back a few times) but nothing that got way too out of hand. I mention it because the bands with the thrashing music played multi-shows over their careers. Woodstock 99 was just a bad vibe for other reasons.

ViewAskewbian 08-09-22 11:36 AM

re: Trainwreck: Woodstock '99 (Netflix) premieres 8/3/22
 
As an interesting comparison, look up KultureLand and KingstonFest here in Canada this past weekend. That went off the rails due to shit or

bluetoast 08-09-22 11:38 AM

re: Trainwreck: Woodstock '99 (Netflix) premieres 8/3/22
 
And then there was that one idiot who justified the actions by saying in a group of 250,000, that crimes happen. Fuck him. There's a level of safety and security that you expect when bringing people together of 1/10 that size, let alone 250k.

ViewAskewbian 08-09-22 11:40 AM

re: Trainwreck: Woodstock '99 (Netflix) premieres 8/3/22
 

Originally Posted by Michael Corvin (Post 14145171)

Do we know how much they raked in?

According to Heavy.com:

"The Huffington Post reported in 2014 that Woodstock 99’s production costs were $38 million, and that there were 400,000 festivalgoers who paid $150 for tickets. That means organizers raked in $60 million on ticket costs for a profit margin of $22 million.

. . .

Organizer Michael Lang recently died with a net worth of around $10 million."

Inhumans99 08-09-22 12:46 PM

re: Trainwreck: Woodstock '99 (Netflix) premieres 8/3/22
 
bluetoast, yeah I cringed when the guy said well, in any average city of 250,000 folks you would not be surprised to learn that a handful of women were assaulted/raped, just a very tone deaf and crass thing to say.

View, so they could have thrown a few million towards actually paying for folks who would regularly empty the trash, or pull up in one of those tanker trucks with a hose that periodically empties the Andy Gump's, or for actual security guards (even if they were not armed, because the festival goers had to be laughing their asses off when they saw folks with shirts that said Peace Patrol on them, if a bunch of folks who were actually wearing outfits that made them look like Security for the event were part of the crowd that might have helped calm things down).

Seriously, eff the promoter of this for cheaping out and it is just BS that he did not get sued to the point where he was not being interviewed from a cardboard box for the Netflix docu series.

ViewAskewbian 08-09-22 12:52 PM

re: Trainwreck: Woodstock '99 (Netflix) premieres 8/3/22
 
Probably a good idea Woodstock 50 didn't happen:

The Disastrous Woodstock 50: What Went Wrong? - The New York Times (nytimes.com)

Inhumans99 08-09-22 05:58 PM

re: Trainwreck: Woodstock '99 (Netflix) premieres 8/3/22
 
Yikes, had no clue Lang wanted another bite at the Woodstock Apple in 2019, and it sounds like his submission to City Officials was a joke, without adequate plans for enough security, etc., for such a large event. I do suspect that many folks looked at Lang's proposals and thought to themselves, seriously, the dude did not learn anything from the disaster that was Woodstock 99 and wanted to pretty much recreate the 99 with different musical acts.

It sounds like he learned nothing from 99 and there were no good plans to handle the flow of traffic (vehicle / foot traffic), make sure there was enough water (potable and otherwise) to accommodate a large and crowded multi-day event, no great plans for enough security, and of course you have to wonder if like 99, there were no plans in writing to hold vendors accountable who were supposed to handle waste services (garbage pick-up / Porta Potty maintenance), yeesh.

Bluelitespecial 08-14-22 08:36 AM

Re: Trainwreck: Woodstock '99 (Netflix) premieres 8/3/22
 
I finally watched this documentary last night. I thought it felt much more raw and disturbing. The stories that stood out to me was the ABC news reporter going to the medical area and saying it felt like a triage unit. I liked the more on the ground type of videos included and it had much less political commentary compared to the HBO documentary which was a good thing to me.

whotony 08-14-22 10:03 PM

Re: Trainwreck: Woodstock '99 (Netflix) premieres 8/3/22
 
Does this show add anything we didn’t already get from the one on HBO?

TomOpus 08-14-22 10:24 PM

Re: Trainwreck: Woodstock '99 (Netflix) premieres 8/3/22
 

Originally Posted by whotony (Post 14148189)
Does this show add anything we didn’t already get from the one on HBO?

The show doesn't really change. It's just how you present it. Imagine if Spielberg and Tarantino made a movie about the Super Bowl. The game is basically the same but you'll get different movies.

I say watch this one too to get a good overall look at the trainwreck.

clckworang 08-15-22 08:32 PM

Re: Trainwreck: Woodstock '99 (Netflix) premieres 8/3/22
 
I finally got around to watching this one. It's another good look at the event. I think it's worth checking out even if you've seen the other documentary, though it hits some similar beats.

As for the bands, I can see where one could put some blame on them - but not criminal or anything. I just mean that some of their sets certainly helped feed into that energy and wasn't trying to pull it back. Of course, look at the bands you chose to book. That's sort of their sound. It's aggressive. You can't blame the bands for that when you chose to book them.

I remember really wanting to go to the 94 Woodstock, but I didn't have any interest in this one.

whotony 08-15-22 08:49 PM

Re: Trainwreck: Woodstock '99 (Netflix) premieres 8/3/22
 
I watched all 3 eps last night.
It was okay.

I think the hbo version was much better.
This one didn’t really add anything as far as information and the HBO one went deeper into some things. This one didn’t mention anything about someone dying.

ViewAskewbian 08-16-22 07:10 AM

Re: Trainwreck: Woodstock '99 (Netflix) premieres 8/3/22
 
I wonder if any of the naked people are peeved and have some explaining to do to their kids. :p

Decker 08-19-22 01:01 AM

Re: Trainwreck: Woodstock '99 (Netflix) premieres 8/3/22
 

Originally Posted by Inhumans99 (Post 14145221)
bluetoast, yeah I cringed when the guy said well, in any average city of 250,000 folks you would not be surprised to learn that a handful of women were assaulted/raped, just a very tone deaf and crass thing to say.

Yeah. “Not that many rapes, considering…” is just about the worst thing you could possibly say on camera. The filmmakers had to have looked at each other when he said it and whispered “Did you get that?”.

I thought the doc was fine but not as good as the HBO one. Didn’t really add anything and lacked some of the perspective and social commentary of the HBO one. But hey, there was more nudity, so that was interesting at least.


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