







I went into The Last Waltz knowing nothing about The Band and came out feeling like a convert. It’s without doubt one of the greatest concert films ever made — a farewell that plays like a resurrection. Scorsese treats the stage like a cathedral, his cameras gliding through smoke, sweat, and sheer joy, capturing a group both burning out and burning bright.
The sheer amount of drugs coursing through the musicians and crew makes its clarity even more astonishing. Somehow, through all the haze, the performances are tight, the sound pristine, and the energy electric. Every frame feels alive, even as it documents an ending. And yes — play it loud. It’s the only way to feel the roof lift.
It’s unfair to compare it to Stop Making Sense — that’s a narrative masterpiece, this is a communion. The Last Waltz doesn’t just chronicle a concert; it immortalises a moment when music, madness, and meaning met on the same stage.