🚚 Free Worldwide Shipping on All Orders!Shop Now
HomeStore

Vote for Change

Product image 1

Vote for Change

Rent to stream on Channel 10c for 48 hours once started.

In 2004 directors Coan Nichols and Rick Charnoski set out from Seattle to make a "Super 8 home movie" of Pearl Jam's barnstorming, eight-city Vote for Change Tour. There was no script, no plan. It was gritty, reality film-making in the finest tradition -- recording human moments with hard-pressed voters from Reading, Pa., to Kissimee, Fl.;  getting the music down wherever it happened, including unforgettable footage of a Pearl Jam sound check with Neil Young in a hockey rink in Toledo, Ohio. The result: a film locked away in a vault for four years -- is by turns tender, raw and electric. But more than that it remains a  searingly painful lesson about what can happen when the wheels come off America's democracy.

Rent to stream on Channel 10c for 48 hours once started.

In 2004 directors Coan Nichols and Rick Charnoski set out from Seattle to make a "Super 8 home movie" of Pearl Jam's barnstorming, eight-city Vote for Change Tour. There was no script, no plan. It was gritty, reality film-making in the finest tradition -- recording human moments with hard-pressed voters from Reading, Pa., to Kissimee, Fl.;  getting the music down wherever it happened, including unforgettable footage of a Pearl Jam sound check with Neil Young in a hockey rink in Toledo, Ohio. The result: a film locked away in a vault for four years -- is by turns tender, raw and electric. But more than that it remains a  searingly painful lesson about what can happen when the wheels come off America's democracy.

$1.20

Original: $3.99

-70%
Vote for Change

$3.99

$1.20

Description

Rent to stream on Channel 10c for 48 hours once started.

In 2004 directors Coan Nichols and Rick Charnoski set out from Seattle to make a "Super 8 home movie" of Pearl Jam's barnstorming, eight-city Vote for Change Tour. There was no script, no plan. It was gritty, reality film-making in the finest tradition -- recording human moments with hard-pressed voters from Reading, Pa., to Kissimee, Fl.;  getting the music down wherever it happened, including unforgettable footage of a Pearl Jam sound check with Neil Young in a hockey rink in Toledo, Ohio. The result: a film locked away in a vault for four years -- is by turns tender, raw and electric. But more than that it remains a  searingly painful lesson about what can happen when the wheels come off America's democracy.

Vote for Change | Ten Club LLC