Would’ve been way better. Densmore is jealous of Jim and says a lot of untruths. Ray and Robbie were very unhappy with the way Jim was portrayed in the movie and that was due to Oliver Stone using John Densmore’s accounts instead. Never use a jealous man’s “memories.”
Kilmer really did a great job not easy role to play loved the movie & the doors are still my favorite band and probably always will be music is timeless
jason crumpet well really ray was the only one who despised it. I don't think Robbie and John minded it. John even said Val Kilmer should've gotten an award for his performance as Jim.
Doesn’t show the true nature of the real Jim Morrison who by all accounts seemed like a genuinely nice guy when the legend and all that is stripped away.Best book on Jim IMO is Jim Morrison :Life Death Legend by Steven Davis
Oliver did well portraying Jim’s public persona, but never relayed the wise, down to earth, intensely interesting conversationalist Jim on interviews I’ve heard. Still I’ll watch the full movie when ever I catch it on.
Saw them in the Men’s Gym at Long Beach State College on December 1, 1967, a long time ago in a galaxy far, far away... Opening act, Canned Heat. We sat in the bleachers. I was 16. ‘Tis a magical musical memory still turning in the windmills of my mind.
I went to see this when it came out in the cinemas in '91 tripping on blotter. I thoroughly enjoyed everything about it. After the movie we all went to our favourite night-club called "The Doors" in Johannesburg and danced to classic rock and alternative until the wee hours of the morn. Great weekend that was. Probably wouldn't enjoy the movie now as much as I did then though.
Val did an incredible job playing JIM. Great movie and acting. Not totally historically accurate at times and portrayed Jim more negatively than many remember. Still great job imo.
I see a lot of people here criticizing the movie. First off, to depict a character as deep and complex as Jim Morrison is pretty much impossible, Val Kilmer probably did about as good a job as anyone could. Jim did more things in one day then most do in a lifetime and not even Ray understood a lot of what he was really trying to do or say. I'm talking about “real” things not just going to work, walking the dog, mowing the lawn etc. Second, to take the thousands of things done by these guys and discuss them all in a two hour movie is also quite impossible. Stone's method was to blend several instances or characters into one. This of course is not “literally” accurate but was an attempt to give an overall feel for the Doors and the time. The movie is a work of art and philosophy not a documentary.
Thoriel Criafer I don't think anyone is criticizing Val Kilmer,he did a remarkable job as an actor portraying Morrison. I think most people criticizing the movie are more frustrated with Oliver Stone's interpretation of Morrison. Certainly, some artistic license is to be expected, but portraying Morrison as a falling down drunk, or being high 24/7 is not only inaccurate, but unfair as well. The Doors wrote, recorded and released 5 albums in the short 4 years that they were together...presumably Morrison had to have been sober at various points to be able to do that. Interviews with him that have come out in the years since his death show a lucid, thoughtful and intelligent man. There were other totally inaccurate scenes in the film; I saw The Doors when they did Light My Fire on The Ed Sullivan Show in '67, and Morrison never made an animated, over dramatic facial expression when he said the word "higher" during the song. He never lunged at the camera as he said that word, as Kilmer did in the film ( assume not that Kilmer was directed to do so by Stone); he put no more emphasis on that lyric than he did any other line in the song. Had The Doors been a fictional band, then Stone could have gotten away with interpreting the story any way he wanted to. But they were real, an important part of music history, and their story deserves to be told in an honest way. At the very least, more honestly than Stone told it. Artistic license is condensing the story to fit the time allotted, perhaps leaving certain things out, etc. But completely altering the truth, or portraying a real person as someone they are not ( or weren't) is not artistic license. It's just fiction.
the band never did peyote together in the desert, jim never tried to burn pam alive, jim never lunged at the camera on the ed sullivan show, ray believed in jim way more than shown in the movie, and jim wasn’t a drunken asshole to everyone who ever asked him a question. i could go on. the movie is straight up disrespectful to not only Jim but the whole band as each of them is so 1-dimensional. Oliver Stone takes way too many liberties in other films too, especially Salvador. He dramatizes scenes, events, and people that don’t need any changes made. If it takes too long to shed light on who Jim really was then maybe it should have been a 3 hour movie (like malcom x) or no movie at all.
Love The Doors. Love the movie. I continue to watch it once in awhile. I met Ray at his book signing at Borders Books at the Northridge mall. Purchased his book and he signed it and also signed my Doors album. My album is framed and on my wall. I will never forget that night.
Clouded Mind we all might not know how jim was really like in person we all weren’t there obviously but I mean. There is a thing called like interviews & documentaries & biographies from the ppl that really knew jim & where there
Debra Franklin's yea don’t get me wrong I like the movie but I like it because is the only doors movie we have and some parts are very Jim like but they exaggerated the wild persona of jim and it’s not accurate, Oliver just wanted to make it more entertaining I get that, it’s a movie but don’t fuck up Jim Morrison’s legacy like that. Only true fans will know.
This was and still is an incredible movie. Oliver stone created a great tribute to this beautiful complex and ultimately enigmatic God of rock. Val Kilmer became Jim Morrison. I love this movie!
Always felt Jason Patric (The Los Boys) could of rocked it as Jim. He had the leer, the darkness, whereas Val was too bright eyed, but did a great performance. There were great parts in the movie and some bad ones, what can you do. //g
Before the 'Doors' became famous they would play a lot at the end of Windward at the community centers lawn, and some times on the large drain pipe near the center. Other groups played yr ed there constantly around the mid 1960s. Ironically I had 4 days work as a cop and a hippie in the film .
He did a great job coaching Kevin Dillon. I'm not sure if Dillon played drums before doing this movie, but that one clip they showed he was kicking butt! But John Densmore was IN the movie. Not sure why they just didn't get HIM to show Dillon what to do. Robbie Krieger coached Frank Whaley, to make his performance believable. But there are people who can play, and people who can teach. Maybe Densmore wasn't able to teach what he did to someone else. I've often wondered if Dillon kept up with the drums after filming this movie.
it may not have been 100 percent accurate and they showed his drinking side and drug side more than the soft poetic side of jim. but the live singing and playing was 100 percent accurate for sure. add the more softer poetic side to the live musical playing and its a way better film. the intro was great too.
l met Ray also, he was doing a concert with an SF poet in NorCal.. l was nobody and he was as friendlly and as interested in me as he could be,.,. A truly good person Ray Manzarek.
I loved this movie when it came out around 1991. I was 23 years old back then. But after hearing different interviews with the late Ray Manzarek saying that Jim Morrison wasn’t exactly the same persona like Val Kilmer in the movie, I suddenly realized that he was absolutely right about it. I must agree with Ray Manzarek all the way. By far, Jim Morrison was a much better human being than what was presented in this movie. I think that Oliver Stone made a laughing mockery out of Jim Morrison by making him look more violent and more like a jerk. Besides, it’s been proven that there’s been a lot of fuckups in the events and most of the chronological dates were wrong in the movie as well. Thank you. Johnny, Montréal, Canada.
Patricia was never backstage at the New Haven Concert in a bathroom with Jim it was with an unknown brunette, so allot of the stuff in the movie was exaggerated and such...
Most of the Patricia K stuff in the movie was a collage of true events involving different women. Stone said if he were doing it over again he would have given the character in the film a fictional name.
5:10 Does Patricia says "Do you hear them out there ,Its you they want Val?" I was told she calls him Val in that scene and It does sound like Val not Jim or is it just Me?
Funniest thing is that when I watch this movie, I can't even see the actors "acting" the members of the Doors. I just see Ray Manzarek, Jim Morrison, Robbie Krieger and John Densmore. You tell me that Jim is Val Kilmer? That Ray is Kyle MacLachlan, for god's sake? Frank Whaley is Robbie? I mean look at the actors outside of the movie, and tell me those are the same people acting The Doors! It is insane. Some cosmic event happened in this movie and turned those actors into the people they were portraying man. Hahaha Val is _still_ Jim in the interview... the way he speaks... tbh I think it took Val YEARS to completely get Jim out of his system.
Ray Manzarek, the real keyboard player for the doors HATED the movie, he called Oliver Stone a putz for portraying Jim as a drunk and drug addict, he said there was so much more to Jim. Morrison was incredibly literate and although destructive when Jim wasn't drunk he was a beautiful person and very intelligent
Was able to pieces of work over a 5 week period due to the locations and non continuity of scenes. There was 2 sequences shot at amd near the Hole in the wall state park near the Colorado river in the desert. Most of the live concerts in the film were around Los Angeles.
Thank you for bringing this up. Ray was actually a pretty down to earth and pleasant man who had a real love for playing music. He had intelligence and complexities but he really wasn't a "stuffed shirt." He was also far fonder of Jim than we see in the movie. Stone doesn't really give very dimensional portraits of the other Doors either.
Enjoyed the film thought Val did great as Jim. Interesting fact :Jim was starstruck when he bumped into John Lennon at some event in the 60s. Couldnt speak just froze on the spot.
I love this movie for what it is... an Oliver Stone film. This is no diff than what Tarantino did with Inglorious Basterds. These filmmakers can take all the liberties they want.
Doors never had a bass player except sometimes in the studio like Elvis's bass player Jerry Scheff who played on all songs off L.A. WOMAN except La'merica
It's too bad Ray is gone, I've always hoped he'd make a real Doors film, and of course direct it. He would have shown the real Morrison, the erudite poet, the modern day renaissance man as Paul Rothchild once referred to him. Instead of the caricature of Jim, the black clad leather demon, the drunk. Of course he was also these things as well, but a film about the man, the funny, the storyteller, the human side of James Douglas Morrison..
This film would have won an acedemy award for best music fiction documentary.....that is if The Doors didn't really exist...... To see The REAL DOORS..... May i suggest " When You're Strange" and Feast of Friends DVDs. The real music...the real DOORS.
A typical Oliver Stone movie, based on fact, just very little of it. But he still makes very entertaining movies, just don't use them as a source for real history.
Somebody gets it. Just because it’s all false doesn’t mean it can’t be a good movie. You can very easily find a real account of all of these moments anyway.
I love Oliver stone movies but i do wish he would be more accurate about things. Some things an not put his “I wish it went like this” in his movies. Especially about Jim.
Val Kilmer is a great actor and did his best with what he had to work with,however Oliver Stone is known to make up his own stories while using non fictional characters in his movies ,the movie and pretty much the rest of the cast were total crap.
Bruce Gary was the drummer of The Knack, the band that released "My Sharona". I didn't know he had taught the actor playing John Densmore to play drums
Imagine a Doors movie in Ray Manzarek hands.
The soft parade exists
@@AvanRoyOfficial it's a documentary, not a movie.
Would’ve been like 5 hours long with extra details & properly recalled events
@@JNava I'd still watch it 5 hours hell even over 9,000 hours
Would’ve been way better. Densmore is jealous of Jim and says a lot of untruths. Ray and Robbie were very unhappy with the way Jim was portrayed in the movie and that was due to Oliver Stone using John Densmore’s accounts instead. Never use a jealous man’s “memories.”
Kilmer really did a great job not easy role to play loved the movie & the doors are still my favorite band and probably always will be music is timeless
Loved this film as a teen, but now, as an adult, I understand why the remaining members of the Doors hated it.
jason crumpet same as me
Dave Goffredo like wise man loved it as a young man but now I’m older & it’s like I have to agree with the rest of the band & you two guys
jason crumpet well really ray was the only one who despised it. I don't think Robbie and John minded it. John even said Val Kilmer should've gotten an award for his performance as Jim.
Same
Doesn’t show the true nature of the real Jim Morrison who by all accounts seemed like a genuinely nice guy when the legend and all that is stripped away.Best book on Jim IMO is Jim Morrison :Life Death Legend by Steven Davis
Oliver did well portraying Jim’s public persona, but never relayed the wise, down to earth, intensely interesting conversationalist Jim on interviews I’ve heard. Still I’ll watch the full movie when ever I catch it on.
Yeah you're right. But this is all we got, and it's okay.
Saw them in the Men’s Gym at Long Beach State College on December 1, 1967, a long time ago in a galaxy far, far away... Opening act, Canned Heat. We sat in the bleachers. I was 16. ‘Tis a magical musical memory still turning in the windmills of my mind.
I went to see this when it came out in the cinemas in '91 tripping on blotter. I thoroughly enjoyed everything about it. After the movie we all went to our favourite night-club called "The Doors" in Johannesburg and danced to classic rock and alternative until the wee hours of the morn. Great weekend that was. Probably wouldn't enjoy the movie now as much as I did then though.
Val did a great JOB playing JIM I love this movie...
Ruby Eversole Lamb me too! Love it!
Just the first half is good.. the rest is bullshit lol
still one of the best rock biopics
Herve B *the worst
Iliyana Serrano exactly, it was so far off
Wonderful job. Val brought Jim back to life.
Love this movie. Love The Doors. Love Jim Morrison. Thankyou 🙏🏻💖🌠
Val did an incredible job playing JIM. Great movie and acting. Not totally historically accurate at times and portrayed Jim more negatively than many remember. Still great job imo.
Not accurate at all, dumbass.
Val Kilmer did great!!! No one could have done a better job
He also played a great John Holmes
He couldn't even sing like him!
I could’ve
@JoeJoe do you have ears?
He always told everyone to refer to him as Jim.
I see a lot of people here criticizing the movie. First off, to depict a character as deep and complex as Jim Morrison is pretty much impossible, Val Kilmer probably did about as good a job as anyone could. Jim did more things in one day then most do in a lifetime and not even Ray understood a lot of what he was really trying to do or say. I'm talking about “real” things not just going to work, walking the dog, mowing the lawn etc. Second, to take the thousands of things done by these guys and discuss them all in a two hour movie is also quite impossible. Stone's method was to blend several instances or characters into one. This of course is not “literally” accurate but was an attempt to give an overall feel for the Doors and the time. The movie is a work of art and philosophy not a documentary.
Thoriel Criafer I don't think anyone is criticizing Val Kilmer,he did a remarkable job as an actor portraying Morrison. I think most people criticizing the movie are more frustrated with Oliver Stone's interpretation of Morrison. Certainly, some artistic license is to be expected, but portraying Morrison as a falling down drunk, or being high 24/7 is not only inaccurate, but unfair as well. The Doors wrote, recorded and released 5 albums in the short 4 years that they were together...presumably Morrison had to have been sober at various points to be able to do that. Interviews with him that have come out in the years since his death show a lucid, thoughtful and intelligent man. There were other totally inaccurate scenes in the film; I saw The Doors when they did Light My Fire on The Ed Sullivan Show in '67, and Morrison never made an animated, over dramatic facial expression when he said the word "higher" during the song. He never lunged at the camera as he said that word, as Kilmer did in the film ( assume not that Kilmer was directed to do so by Stone); he put no more emphasis on that lyric than he did any other line in the song. Had The Doors been a fictional band, then Stone could have gotten away with interpreting the story any way he wanted to. But they were real, an important part of music history, and their story deserves to be told in an honest way. At the very least, more honestly than Stone told it. Artistic license is condensing the story to fit the time allotted, perhaps leaving certain things out, etc.
But completely altering the truth, or portraying a real person as someone they are not ( or weren't) is not artistic license. It's just fiction.
the band never did peyote together in the desert, jim never tried to burn pam alive, jim never lunged at the camera on the ed sullivan show, ray believed in jim way more than shown in the movie, and jim wasn’t a drunken asshole to everyone who ever asked him a question. i could go on. the movie is straight up disrespectful to not only Jim but the whole band as each of them is so 1-dimensional. Oliver Stone takes way too many liberties in other films too, especially Salvador. He dramatizes scenes, events, and people that don’t need any changes made. If it takes too long to shed light on who Jim really was then maybe it should have been a 3 hour movie (like malcom x) or no movie at all.
@@wheelmantony It's called cinematic license.
Well said
It's a cool movie.
Love The Doors. Love the movie. I continue to watch it once in awhile. I met Ray at his book signing at Borders Books at the Northridge mall. Purchased his book and he signed it and also signed my Doors album. My album is framed and on my wall. I will never forget that night.
Jim Morrison was a better person.
True
Yes he was. This is so inacurrate
Debra Franklin's how do you know? Were you there?
Clouded Mind we all might not know how jim was really like in person we all weren’t there obviously but I mean. There is a thing called like interviews & documentaries & biographies from the ppl that really knew jim & where there
Debra Franklin's yea don’t get me wrong I like the movie but I like it because is the only doors movie we have and some parts are very Jim like but they exaggerated the wild persona of jim and it’s not accurate, Oliver just wanted to make it more entertaining I get that, it’s a movie but don’t fuck up Jim Morrison’s legacy like that. Only true fans will know.
This was and still is an incredible movie. Oliver stone created a great tribute to this beautiful complex and ultimately enigmatic God of rock. Val Kilmer became Jim Morrison. I love this movie!
Critics aside, Stone captures the culture, dynamics, spirit of those times...
Jim Morrison,Batman,Doc Holiday.
Crawford DeLarge
John Holmes
Gay Perry
Philip II of Macedon, The Saint
Agent Cooper, Brett, Ethan Hawke-lookalike-Densmore
Always felt Jason Patric (The Los Boys) could of rocked it as Jim. He had the leer, the darkness, whereas Val was too bright eyed, but did a great performance.
There were great parts in the movie and some bad ones, what can you do.
//g
Before the 'Doors' became famous they would play a lot at the end of Windward at the community centers lawn, and some times on the large drain pipe near the center. Other groups played yr ed there constantly around the mid 1960s.
Ironically I had 4 days work as a cop and a hippie in the film .
The guy in the movie is a jerk. I wouldn't want anything to do with that guy.
Ray Manzarek
IntoTheHeartOfMusic when did he said that?
The actor or actually ray?
m.th-cam.com/video/sAp06QP2Fws/w-d-xo.html
:34
It's a film. ...wonder what ur. Life movie wonder 😅
Kevin Dillon is killing it on the drums😮
I agree
i looked for this drum sequence for years!!!!!!
Meg ryan looked the best in this movie
Val Kilmer's best performance
Hey Bruce Gary from The Knack. Focking great to see him. And RIP
I think they need to make more rock movies like this because this was the best movie that came out of 1991
Idk why but it’s really satisfying to hear Stoma talk about Val’s “beautiful, honeyed voice”
I can not believe it. Val did not get an Oscar for this masterpiece. What the f........... God Bless Val Kilmer.
The real Paul Rothchild died on March 30, 1995 of lung cancer at age 59.
Val Kilmer was insane but why nobody is talking about the guy who played ed Sullivan, I thought it was really him!
The best moovie forever....And the best band!
One of the best bio-pics of a musician(s) made.
Dude Johnny Drama can play the shit outta those drums!
2:40, Bruce Gary! Only fitting that the drummer for an LA band was the drum coach for a movie about another LA band, Keep drumming in heaven, Bruce
He did a great job coaching Kevin Dillon. I'm not sure if Dillon played drums before doing this movie, but that one clip they showed he was kicking butt! But John Densmore was IN the movie. Not sure why they just didn't get HIM to show Dillon what to do. Robbie Krieger coached Frank Whaley, to make his performance believable. But there are people who can play, and people who can teach. Maybe Densmore wasn't able to teach what he did to someone else. I've often wondered if Dillon kept up with the drums after filming this movie.
it may not have been 100 percent accurate and they showed his drinking side and drug side more than the soft poetic side of jim. but the live singing and playing was 100 percent accurate for sure. add the more softer poetic side to the live musical playing and its a way better film. the intro was great too.
great movie!I loved it...val is amazing
l met Ray also, he was doing a concert with an SF poet in NorCal.. l was nobody and he was as friendlly and as interested in me as he could be,.,. A truly good person Ray Manzarek.
Kiefer Sutherland should've portrayed Ray in this movie
JUST OLIVER STONE CAN MAKE THIS MOVIE... VAL AND THE OTHERS ARE PERFECT!!!
So many mixed emotions about this movie.
Pretty great movie and brought a lot of attention ack to the music of the Doors.
I LOVE THE DOORS
Love this movie .... Val was Jim
I like when Val made an audio recording of him and played it along with Jim actually singing and he could not tell the difference
I loved this movie when it came out around 1991. I was 23 years old back then. But after hearing different interviews with the late Ray Manzarek saying that Jim Morrison wasn’t exactly the same persona like Val Kilmer in the movie, I suddenly realized that he was absolutely right about it. I must agree with Ray Manzarek all the way. By far, Jim Morrison was a much better human being than what was presented in this movie. I think that Oliver Stone made a laughing mockery out of Jim Morrison by making him look more violent and more like a jerk. Besides, it’s been proven that there’s been a lot of fuckups in the events and most of the chronological dates were wrong in the movie as well. Thank you. Johnny, Montréal, Canada.
love that meg ryan...wow
Kevin Dillion's a pretty good percussionist
I was born in 91, watched Doors in 98.
Wit my uncle Jeff. .
IT'S HARD TO TELL SOMETIMES WHERE JIM BEGINS AND VAL ENDS!!!
I love that the movie. I feel like Jim Morsting. I wish Jim is still alive ❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭
This film profoundly changed me from a pubescent teenager that understood nothing into an omniscient everything.
I always thought that Jeff Buckley carried the spirit of those times .
סרט טוב עצוב שזמר כל כך מוכשר ואהוב גמר את החיים לו ככה. זמר הכי טוב בכל הזמנים
Love the filme, love Jim, love Val kilmer. Love the band
Oliver certainly knew how to capture the feeling of an acid trip!
Patricia was never backstage at the New Haven Concert in a bathroom with Jim it was with an unknown brunette, so allot of the stuff in the movie was exaggerated and such...
Most of the Patricia K stuff in the movie was a collage of true events involving different women. Stone said if he were doing it over again he would have given the character in the film a fictional name.
Ellie Bean the guy at 4:55 shoulve played as Robby Krieger.
I actually worked with Jim and it's as accurate as it gets
loved this movie
5:10 Does Patricia says "Do you hear them out there ,Its you they want Val?" I was told she calls him Val in that scene and It does sound like Val not Jim or is it just Me?
“it’s you they want now” I’m pretty sure
@@kmart3453 Thanks for that I remember my brother telling me she says "Val" thanks again hope you had a great Christmas
Had that movie, loaned it out
Never got it back
Funniest thing is that when I watch this movie, I can't even see the actors "acting" the members of the Doors. I just see Ray Manzarek, Jim Morrison, Robbie Krieger and John Densmore. You tell me that Jim is Val Kilmer? That Ray is Kyle MacLachlan, for god's sake? Frank Whaley is Robbie? I mean look at the actors outside of the movie, and tell me those are the same people acting The Doors! It is insane. Some cosmic event happened in this movie and turned those actors into the people they were portraying man.
Hahaha Val is _still_ Jim in the interview... the way he speaks... tbh I think it took Val YEARS to completely get Jim out of his system.
Then you are pretty fucking stupid since this movie is completely inaccurate.
Ray Manzarek, the real keyboard player for the doors HATED the movie, he called Oliver Stone a putz for portraying Jim as a drunk and drug addict, he said there was so much more to Jim. Morrison was incredibly literate and although destructive when Jim wasn't drunk he was a beautiful person and very intelligent
Even Ray was miscast.Kiefer Sutherland should've gotten the role.
great drum pattern !
LOVE THIS MOVIE
Fuck that, outstanding flick
Love Oliver Stone. He is a haunted person. I hope he makes another great film.
que asombrosa película, quiero verla en Netflix o Amazon, para disfrutarla en Alta Definición.
This is included on our THE DOORS movie DVD. Collectors Edition. Disc 1 is d movie. & disk 2 is the documentary. B-)
Was able to pieces of work over a 5 week period due to the locations and non continuity of scenes. There was 2 sequences shot at amd near the Hole in the wall state park near the Colorado river in the desert. Most of the live concerts in the film were around Los Angeles.
I wish they had the making of the doors on dvd
In the movie they made Ray as a stuffed shirt prick which he was not
Thank you for bringing this up. Ray was actually a pretty down to earth and pleasant man who had a real love for playing music. He had intelligence and complexities but he really wasn't a "stuffed shirt." He was also far fonder of Jim than we see in the movie. Stone doesn't really give very dimensional portraits of the other Doors either.
Awful actor too. Kiefer Sutherland should've portrayed Ray
Is possible to see Jim writing o reading in the film? I dont remember
FROM THE LIZARD KING TO BATMAN
Enjoyed the film thought Val did great as Jim. Interesting fact :Jim was starstruck when he bumped into John Lennon at some event in the 60s. Couldnt speak just froze on the spot.
i can't believe this only has 745 likes.....most are mine....
loved the movie
I love this movie for what it is... an Oliver Stone film. This is no diff than what Tarantino did with Inglorious Basterds. These filmmakers can take all the liberties they want.
Yes it is, cuz Quentin writes alone. Oliver only CO..... Wrote The Doors Movie!
Doors never had a bass player except sometimes in the studio like Elvis's bass player Jerry Scheff who played on all songs off L.A. WOMAN except La'merica
Wrong, dumbass! They never had bass guitar whatsoever.
Excellent!!!
It's too bad Ray is gone, I've always hoped he'd make a real Doors film, and of course direct it. He would have shown the real Morrison, the erudite poet, the modern day renaissance man as Paul Rothchild once referred to him. Instead of the caricature of Jim, the black clad leather demon, the drunk. Of course he was also these things as well, but a film about the man, the funny, the storyteller, the human side of James Douglas Morrison..
Kevin Dillon from entourage?
always thought Harry Hamlin from clash of the titans resemble him the most
He does, but was too old by the time they made this movie. It starts with Jim in college.
LOVE THE MOVIE
Val really looks like Jim
Except, No!
What a shame it wasn't a very good film
I miss the 90s
AME ESTA PELICULA......AL PUNTO DEL FANATISMO EN 1994😁😁🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰👏🏾👏🏾👏🏾👏🏾👏🏾👏🏾👏🏾👏🏾👏🏾
epic movie
Great movie
Morrison was Society's introduction to The 'Me Generation' Narcissism that is rampant today.
hard to believe this was 30 years ago.....
This film would have won an acedemy award for best music fiction documentary.....that is if The Doors didn't really exist...... To see The REAL DOORS..... May i suggest " When You're Strange" and Feast of Friends DVDs. The real music...the real DOORS.
The best movie ever
A typical Oliver Stone movie, based on fact, just very little of it. But he still makes very entertaining movies, just don't use them as a source for real history.
Somebody gets it. Just because it’s all false doesn’t mean it can’t be a good movie. You can very easily find a real account of all of these moments anyway.
I love Oliver stone movies but i do wish he would be more accurate about things. Some things an not put his “I wish it went like this” in his movies. Especially about Jim.
Hermosa pelicula
I so wanted this movie to be much better than it was.
PEOPLE THINK THAT AXL ROSE STARTED THE JUMPING INTO THE CROWD THING BUT IT WAS JIM THAT DID!
Deborah Anderson What actor from the 90s do you think would've been great as Axl Rose if a GNR film came out in the late 90s?
Nobody thinks Axl Rose started the "jumping into the crowd" thing because he didn't.
Val Kilmer is a great actor and did his best with what he had to work with,however Oliver Stone is known to make up his own stories while using non fictional characters in his movies ,the movie and pretty much the rest of the cast were total crap.
This video was better than the actual Doors movie, which was too superficial and didn't really show Jim the person.
Eeeeehhh decimos todos!!! 🕺🕺
Bruce Gary was the drummer of The Knack, the band that released "My Sharona". I didn't know he had taught the actor playing John Densmore to play drums
Classic Oliver Stone Cheese