Saw The Wall last night as well, it was amazing; I saw the show back in 2012 and I didn't think the director would be able to capture the size and depth of that show but he came much closer than I would have expected. For some reason I don't remember The Last Few Bricks being played at the show I went to but I guess it must have.
I love Roger Waters, I think he's the greatest musician in recorded music history for his ability to craft songs and arrangements, let alone write the best lyrics there is, however his psychological problems are a bit too hard to overlook, his scenes in this movie were incredibly self indulgent IMO and I think most of these problems are still with him, like in the Q&A with Nick Mason after the movie he was asked if all his walls came down and he answered "some of them".
That Q&A with Waters and Nick Mason at the end of the movie was very interesting, a few things I got out of it:
- Nick Mason is still interested in a tour with Pink Floyd and he's slightly bummed out that Gilmour and Waters are not.
- Neither Mason nor Waters consider Gilmour a friend, not an enemy neither but someone they did their best work with. I found that to be crappy but then again they're British and understandably not very warm by nature.
- On a question to Waters if he had any regrets about his time in Pink Floyd, he said no but Mason looked astonished as if he wanted Waters say something else, I think he wanted him to acknowledge the court conflict was shitty.
- Waters hinted that Gilmour was not excited about The Wall album idea at first, Mason and Wright were. So I take it that means Gilmour might have been leaning towards The Pros & Cons of Hitchhiking.
I look forward to having this on BluRay and sure hoping Waters includes his 1980 The Wall proshot video in the package but I'm not holding my breath for it.