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Rattle and Hum
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==History== {{Quote box | quote = "I was very keen on the idea of going wide at a time like that, just seeing how big this thing could get. I had always admired [[Colonel Parker]] and [[Brian Epstein]] for realising that music could capture the imagination of the whole world." | source = βU2 manager [[Paul McGuinness]], explaining his original motivation to make a movie.<ref>McGee (2008), p. 105</ref> | width = 25em | align = left }} While in [[Hartford]] during [[the Joshua Tree Tour]] in 1987, U2 met film director [[Phil Joanou]] who made an unsolicited pitch to the band to make a feature-length documentary about the tour. Joanou suggested they hire [[Martin Scorsese]], [[Jonathan Demme]], or [[George Miller (filmmaker)|George Miller]] to direct the film. Joanou met the band again in Dublin to discuss the plans and again in France in September before the band chose him as director. The movie was originally titled ''U2 in the Americas'' and the band planned to film in [[Chicago]] and [[Buenos Aires]] later in the year.<ref>McGee (2008), pp. 105, 109</ref> It was later decided that the Chicago venue was not suitable, and instead U2 used the [[McNichols Sports Arena]] in [[Denver]] to film. Following the success of ''[[Live at Red Rocks: Under a Blood Red Sky]]'', which had been filmed in Denver four years earlier, the band hoped that "lightning might strike twice".<ref name="McGee 2008, p. 112"/> With production problems and estimated costs of $1.2 million the band cancelled the plans for December concerts in South America. At the suggestions of concert promoter [[Barry Fey]], the band instead booked [[Sun Devil Stadium]] at Arizona State University in Tempe, Arizona, the same city where the Joshua Tree Tour began.<ref name="McGee 2008, p. 112">McGee (2008), p. 112</ref> The movie is a [[rockumentary]], which was initially financed by the band and intended to be screened in a small number of cinemas as an independent film. After going over budget, the film was bought by [[Paramount Pictures]] and released in theatres in 1988, before arriving on video in 1989. It was produced by [[Michael Hamlyn]] and directed by Joanou. [[Paul Wasserman]] served as the publicist.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0096328/fullcredits#cast|title=U2: Rattle and Hum (1988) β Full cast and crew|publisher=[[Internet Movie Database]]|access-date=10 August 2011}}</ref> It incorporates live footage with studio outtakes and band interviews. The album is a mix of live material and new studio recordings that furthers the band's experimentation with [[Music of the United States|American music]] styles and recognises many of their musical influences. It was produced by [[Jimmy Iovine]] and also released in 1988. The title, ''Rattle and Hum'', is taken from a lyric from "[[Bullet the Blue Sky]]", the fourth track on ''[[The Joshua Tree]]''. The image used for the album cover and movie poster, depicting Bono shining a spotlight on Edge as he plays, was inspired by a scene in the live performance of "Bullet the Blue Sky" recorded in the film and album, but was recreated in a [[Still frame|stills]] studio and photographed by [[Anton Corbijn]].<ref name="Scrimgeour (2004), p. 273">Scrimgeour (2004), p. 273</ref> Several vinyl copies have the message "We Love You A.L.K." etched into side one, a reference to the band's production manager Anne Louise Kelly, who would be the subject of another secret dedication message on several CD copies of the band's later album, ''[[Pop (U2 album)|Pop]]''.
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