Elliot Teichberg (now Elliot Tiber, played by Demetri Martin) is a young interior designer living in New York City. He moves back home with his parents, Jake (Henry Goodman) and Sonia (Imelda Staunton) in White Lake, NY, to help manage and care for their motel, the El Monaco, and also serve as the president of the chamber of commerce. The family is well behind in the mortgage payments and the bank is going to foreclose, thus forcing them out of their home. Elliot has plans to bring in more tourists and hold his annual art and music festival (which amounts to lawn chairs and records) to help make the money needed to pay the mortgage.
That news gives Elliot an idea. You see, he has the permit from the chamber of commerce saying he can put on an arts and music festival. A phone call later and the motel is crawling with men in suits discussing the possibility of staging the show there, led by hippie entrepreneur Michel Lang (Jonathan Groff). Before you know it, the motel is taken over by a mass of planners and construction workers as they set up their offices and prepare the neighboring fields, owned by dairy farmer Max Yasgur (Eugene Levy).
This is a slice of life type comedy. The story remains backstage and distanced from the actual concert itself. We watch Elliot as he goes about getting the project going and the changes it brings around him. We are ringside as his parents lives change, driven by both an influx of money and revitalization of themselves, spurred by the great influx of people.
How true this is to the actual events, I do not know. I tend to believe that there have been changes here and there, a slight twisting to accommodate the story that Lee wanted to portray. The final product is colorful, sweet, and very laid back. It sort of drifts around the chaos, allowing moments and characters to come through. Elliot finds himself separating himself from his parents, Jake finds himself able to live again, and even connecting with his son in a way he likely never did before. We also meet Michael Lang, who takes everything in stride, always confident that the right outcome will come. There is also a plain talking Vietnam veteran and cross dresser played by Liev Schreiber. There are plenty more along the way just waiting to be discovered.
Bottomline. Fun, interesting, and plays very nicely as counterpoint to the loud and violent movies that often litter the cinematic landscape. It will make you smile, introduce you to interesting characters and give you a different look at one of the most famous concerts ever, an event never to be duplicated.
Recommended.
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