Nobody Knows How to Talk to Children (found White Stripes documentary/concert footage; 2004): Difference between revisions

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|foundby=[http://lostmediawiki.com/User:Bman78 Bman78]
|foundby=[http://lostmediawiki.com/User:Bman78 Bman78]
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In 2004, American garage-rock band The White Stripes were at the height of their success. Their 2003 album ''Elephant'' was met with massive critical acclaim, their music was receiving wide radio airplay, and their live shows were selling out. The band decided to do a four-night series of performances in New York City, calling it their 4-Night Stand. The whole event was filmed for a documentary film titled '''''Nobody Knows How To Talk To Children'''''.
In 2004, the American garage-rock band The White Stripes were at the height of their success. Their 2003 album ''Elephant'' was met with massive critical acclaim, their music was receiving wide radio airplay, and their live shows were selling out. The band decided to do a four-night series of performances in New York City, calling it their 4-Night Stand. The whole event was filmed for a documentary film titled '''''Nobody Knows How To Talk To Children'''''.


Slated for a mid-2004 release, the film was shown by its director without Jack White's permission. To top it all off, the film's audio was poorly mixed, a really bad move for a film whose audio needed to be its biggest focus. White threatened a lawsuit if the director did not withdraw the film from release and has thus not been shown to a massive viewing audience.
Slated for a mid-2004 release, the film was shown by its director without Jack White's permission. To top it all off, the film's audio was poorly mixed, a really bad move for a film whose audio needed to be its biggest focus. White threatened a lawsuit if the director did not withdraw the film from release and has thus not been shown to a massive viewing audience.
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   |description3 =Archive.org mirror of the film.
   |description3 =Archive.org mirror of the film.
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==External Links==
==External Links==
*[https://vk.com/video6144674_159620869 VK video upload of the film.]
*[https://vk.com/video6144674_159620869 VK video upload of the film.] Retrieved 15 Jan '17
*[https://archive.org/details/VK-NKHTTTC/ Alternate Archive.org mirror of the film.]
*[https://archive.org/details/VK-NKHTTTC/ Alternate Archive.org mirror of the film.] Retrieved 15 Jan '17
*[https://mega.nz/#!HEMzjLxY!Bx3wc3Iej9fSE4pDTIpmtlGUKCzRH0Q93uwHadNpUkQ The MEGA file for the film.] Retrieved 15 Jan '17
*[https://mega.nz/#!HEMzjLxY!Bx3wc3Iej9fSE4pDTIpmtlGUKCzRH0Q93uwHadNpUkQ The MEGA file for the film.] Retrieved 15 Jan '17


[[Category:Found media]]
[[Category:Found media]]

Revision as of 14:33, 10 October 2019

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This article has been tagged as Needing work due to its lack of references.



Nkhtttc.JPG

A still from the documentary.

Status: Found

Date found: Unknown

Found by: Bman78

In 2004, the American garage-rock band The White Stripes were at the height of their success. Their 2003 album Elephant was met with massive critical acclaim, their music was receiving wide radio airplay, and their live shows were selling out. The band decided to do a four-night series of performances in New York City, calling it their 4-Night Stand. The whole event was filmed for a documentary film titled Nobody Knows How To Talk To Children.

Slated for a mid-2004 release, the film was shown by its director without Jack White's permission. To top it all off, the film's audio was poorly mixed, a really bad move for a film whose audio needed to be its biggest focus. White threatened a lawsuit if the director did not withdraw the film from release and has thus not been shown to a massive viewing audience.

Videos

A leaked snippet from the documentary.

Another leaked snippet.

Archive.org mirror of the film.

External Links