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Monkees 33 1/3 Revolut.

Monkees  33 1/3 Revolut.

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Directors: Jon C. Andersen, James Frawley
Actors: Micky Dolenz, Peter Tork, Davy Jones, Michael Nesmith
Studio: Rhino (Sma)
Category: Video


This item is no longer available

Rating: 3.0 out of 5 stars 17 reviews
Sales Rank: 761

Format: Ntsc
Language: English (Original Language)
Media: VHS Tape
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.4
Dimensions (in): 7.3 x 4.2 x 1.1

ISBN: 6304331304
UPC: 081227228439
EAN: 9786304331309

Theatrical Release Date: 1968
Release Date: January 28, 1997

Customer Reviews:   Read 12 more reviews...

3 out of 5 stars The Last for the Foursome   September 7, 2003
Mark Ebert (Lancaster OH)
33 1/3 Revolution Per Monkee was the last project (of the originals) to feature all four Monkees--Peter had actually left the group before the special was released on television in 1969. The telecast has been dubbed a water-down version of their masterpiece, "HEAD", but "33 1/3" has some interesting moments of its own. It is a further insight into the foursome and how they felt about their experience as a "manufactured image". Although most of the songs were not released until recent Rhino compilations and box sets (or still never have been), two songs were hits for the Monkees--the standard, "I'm a Believer", and "Listen to the Band", which is completely different from the released version that became a Top 100 hit. As with "HEAD", this project also remarked on where rock'n'roll came from in general and how the machine of fame can overrun the celebrity. Excellent selections are: Davy's "A String for My Kite", and Mike's split-personality song. "Goldilocks Sometimes", another Jones installment, also has merit.


2 out of 5 stars I Love the Monkees......BUT   February 13, 2003
S. Smith (Midwest USA)
I am a HUGE Monkees fan, BUT--This is one of the Monkees worst offerings. No wonder this was the beginning of the end for them! I spent most of my viewing time fast forwarding through this video--even the music was lousy. I'm glad that I only need this particular video to help round out my Monkees video collection because it will probably never get played again--and that's MY two cents worth!


4 out of 5 stars Psychedelic! Freak out! Wheee!   March 15, 2002
cdkscully (Buffalo, NY)
Originally aired on NBC on April 14, 1969, opposite the Academy Awards, 33 1/3 Revolutions Per Monkee was supposed to be the first of three television specials starring The Monkees, but 33 1/3 RPM was the only one that materialized. The show contained songs that were written specifically for it along with a plot that expressed how The Monkees were manufactured and manipulated by different people including Bob Rafelson, Bert Schneider and Don Kirshner during their career.

The story focuses on the famous evolutionist, Charles Darwin (Brian Auger) who takes 4 young men (Micky Dolenz, Davy Jones, Mike Nesmith and Peter Tork) erases their identities and names and takes them through different stages so that they will be able to brainwash the world through commercial exploitation. The Monkees, in an attempt to regain their identities and control over themselves, try to think their way out of captivity. Darwin, alarmed that they will become free, uses hypnotism to break them down physically and they become restored to Darwin's tastes. The Monkees, now ready to make their debut, appear as classic rock'n'rollers at the Paramount Theatre with Fats Domino, Jerry Lee Lewis, Little Richard and Buddy Miles Express playing backup to The Monkees. Darwin, realizing his mistake, sets The Monkees free.

After the failure of their film Head released in 1968, The Monkees went ahead with their television special undaunted by the terrible reviews from critics about the movie. 33 1/3 Revolutions Per Monkee, produced by Jack Good of Shindig, 3.5 Special and Oh Boy! fame, had a lot of time and creativity put into it. The point of the special was to save whatever fans and popularity that they had left and it was virtually snubbed by NBC. By airing it opposite the Academy Awards, the show rated disastrously. Mike Nesmith remembers, "I'd already seen it so I watched the Oscars like everybody else," as told in Glenn A. Baker's book 'Monkeemania.' NBC wasn't taking any chances with this "strange" special that contained psychedelic dancers, music and The Monkees singing and poking fun at their manufactured image.

There weren't any bad reviews for this TV show because no one saw it in 1969 and the critics could care less about The Monkees at that time. It was too far-fetched for the normal public and too uncool for the hippies to watch. The special had a substantial storyline (once it was understood) and some amazing guest stars (such as Brian Auger, Jerry Lee Lewis, and Little Richard). The show also contained songs that expressed their manufactured image ('Wind Up Man'), what each of their backgrounds or favorite type of music was (Micky sang an R&B version of 'I'm a Believer,' Mike sang a country-western tune called 'The Only Thing I Believe is True,' Davy, in fairy tale land sang 'Goldilocks Sometime,' and Peter sang a song about spiritual values called 'Prithee') and marking the end of the group as a quartet ('Listen to the Band'). The highlight of the show was when The Monkees, dressed in '50s like clothes, performed at the Paramount Theatre with the classic rock'n'rollers (Jerry Lee Lewis, Little Richard and Fats Domino) singing such songs as 'Tutti Frutti,' 'Little Darlin',' 'At The Hop' and 'Whole Lotta Shakin.' According to Eric Lefcowitz in his book 'The Monkees Tale, 'This is the peak performance of the Monkees kept on celluloid.'

33 1/3 Revolutions Per Monkee was even praised by Variety on the East Coast by saying, 'It was anything but a conventional norm rock'n'roll and in some respects made 'Laugh-In, which is was pre-empting, seem almost conventional television by comparison.' The special showed The Monkees not as musicians, but as performers and made the public realize that they did have minds and talent of their own.

After viewing this special, it showed me that The Monkees were way ahead of their time. The show was very different from their television series that was shown from 1966-1968. It did not contain the same storyline as "Davy meets girl, Davy falls in love with girl and The Monkees get into a lot of trouble," but it showed that The Monkees matured musically and in their writing abilities. I found the show strange at first, but after watching it a few thousand times (as every Monkees fan should) it began to grow on me. I also found the songs more impressive in this special than in their previous shows and on their albums even though no soundtrack was ever released. 33 1/3 Revolutions Per Monkee "... stands out as one of the greatest lost artifacts of Rock'n'Roll," according to Eric Lefcowitz in his book 'The Monkees Tale.'


5 out of 5 stars Amazing!!!   February 26, 2002
This film is so amazing, i can't believe half the reviews in here give it merely 1 star. These people have no appreciation of the bizarre. This special has some great perfromances, especially from Brain Auger and Julie Driscoll. Buy it, watch it, and your mind will never be the same.


5 out of 5 stars See it to believe it!!!   December 17, 2001
I can't really top the great reviews here (except for the guy who said they should have burnt it!) so I'll just add my own few words...
The only two things in my mind ever to match "33 1/3 Revolutions Per Monkee" for pure far-out psychedelic television are "Magical Mystery Tour" and the final episode of "The Prisoner" (the British tv series written by and starrring Patrick McGoohan)...

This tv special has just got to be seen to be believed for it's weirdness value alone... But the finale featuring, the Nesmith classic "Listen To The Band", has the wildest, psychedelic, free-for-all freak-out, noise and dance(?!) experience you'd never thought you'd ever see on a broadcast tv show!...
(And can someobody tell me just who is the English(?) guy with the moustache who keeps saying "I don't believe it!" ???)

Anyway, I give this slice of pure bizareness a full 5 stars because it's the sort of imaginative, screwed-up and quite scary(!) tv you never get nowadays...



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