A Tribute to Jim Morrison

A Tribute to Jim Morrison (later re titled as The Doors: A Tribute to Jim Morrison and No One Here Gets Out Alive: A Tribute to Jim Morrison) is a 1981 documentary about Jim Morrison, lead singer of American rock band the Doors who died in July 1971.[1]

A Tribute to Jim Morrison
Directed byGordon Forbes III
Produced byRichard Mann
Lawrence Smith
Written byBen Fong-Torres
Music byThe Doors
Distributed byWarner Home Video
Release date
1981
Running time
60 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish

The documentary explores Morrison's interest in film (he was a graduate of UCLA film school), poetry, psychology, mysticism and sexuality. Excerpts of Doors songs are included with only TV appearances playing "Light My Fire" and "Touch Me" played in their entirety. It features contemporary interviews with Morrison as well as interviews with all the surviving members of the group (Ray Manzarek, John Densmore and Robby Krieger), record producer Paul A. Rothchild and Doors' biographers Danny Sugerman and Jerry Hopkins (on whose best-seller No One Here Gets Out Alive the documentary is based on).[2]

Archive film in the documentary is drawn from Granada TV's The Doors Are Open, the band's appearance at the Hollywood Bowl in July 1968, snippets from the then unreleased film Feast of Friends, the opening scene of Apocalypse Now featuring the Doors' song "The End" and television appearances on The Jonathan Winters Show, The Ed Sullivan Show and The Smothers Brothers Comedy Hour.

Many original photos of Morrison and the band are included from Joel Brodsky, Paul Ferrara, Jerry Hopkins, Frank Lisciandro and Gloria Stavers.

The documentary was re-titled upon release on DVD but is now out of print.

Track listing

  1. "Five To One" - excerpt of song from album Waiting for the Sun
  2. "People Are Strange" - excerpt from Elektra Records promo clip
  3. "Back Door Man" - excerpt from The Doors Are Open, Roundhouse, London, September 1968
  4. "Light My Fire" - performance from The Ed Sullivan Show September 17, 1967
  5. "Celebration of the Lizard - excerpt from The Doors Are Open, Roundhouse, London, September 1968
  6. "When The Music's Over" - excerpt from Hollywood Bowl, July 5, 1968
  7. The End" - excerpt from opening titles of Apocalypse Now
  8. "Touch Me" - performance from The Smothers Brothers Comedy Hour December 15, 1968
  9. "Moonlight Drive" - excerpt from The Jonathan Winters Show, December 27, 1967
  10. "The Changeling" - excerpt of song from album L.A. Woman
  11. "Crawling King Snake" - excerpt from The Doors Are Open, Roundhouse, London, September 1968
  12. "L.A. Woman" - excerpt from album track off L.A. Woman
  13. "The Unknown Soldier" - excerpt from The Doors Are Open, Roundhouse, London, September 1968
gollark: I think half the power output is going just on keeping our stuff stored and accessible.
gollark: That takes lots of RF. We only have a single RTG, solar panel, and tree oil setup (which can do 120RF/t *peak*, but probably only 20 sustained).
gollark: We don't have Mekanism, but I assume you mean "automining in general".
gollark: "Very expensive" = "we literally cannot build even the electromagnetic containment with currently available resources"
gollark: I have some cool ultra-compact designs, though.

References

  1. "No One Here Gets out Alive: The Doors' Tribute to Jim Morrison". 16 March 2002. Retrieved 30 November 2018.
  2. "A Tribute To Jim Morrison". raymanzarek.com. Retrieved 20 November 2018.
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