
Road
A young man steals a doctor’s car and has to pretend to be a doctor himself.
Insights
Plot Summary
This raw and intimate documentary follows The Rolling Stones on their chaotic 1972 American tour. Director Robert Frank captures the band's descent into excess and exhaustion, interweaving gritty performance footage with candid, often unsettling, behind-the-scenes moments. The film offers a stark look at the disillusionment and weariness that permeated the rock and roll lifestyle.
Critical Reception
Robert Frank's 'Cocksucker Blues,' also known as 'Road,' is a legendary and controversial film that offers an unflinching, warts-and-all portrayal of The Rolling Stones' 1972 tour. While never officially released due to the band's objections to its explicit content, bootleg copies circulated, cementing its status as a cult classic. Critics and fans alike acknowledge its groundbreaking, vérité style and its stark honesty about the toll of rock stardom, though its graphic nature has made it divisive.
What Reviewers Say
- A brutal and honest depiction of rock and roll excess.
- Groundbreaking for its unflinching, direct-cinema approach.
- Controversial for its explicit and often disturbing content.
Google audience: Information on Google reviews for 'Road' is not readily available due to its limited official release and bootleg status.
Awards & Accolades
None notable (due to non-official release).
Fun Fact
The film was notoriously difficult to get a hold of for decades because The Rolling Stones sued to prevent its release, finding the depiction of their behavior too damaging. It was only screened sporadically and often in underground venues.
AI-generated overview · Verify ratings on official sources