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The Filth and the Fury Movie Review
The Filth and the Fury Review

"The Filth and the Fury" Overview

Rating: NR
2000
Cast and Crew
Director : Julien TempleProducer : Amanda Temple
Screenwiter :
Starring : Paul Cook,Steve Jones,John Lydon,Glen Matlock,Sid Vicious
Good documentaries aren’t hard to find. Great documentaries are few and far
between the cracks of cinematic achievements.
The new documentary The Filth and the Fury ranks as one of the great ones. It
chronicles the rise and tragic fall of the infamous British Punk band The Sex
Pistols, and the cultural impact they have spread upon the world around us.
Director Julian Temple takes the film far above the usual VH-1 retrospectives,
recounting past glories, drug parties, and the way a musician found God in a
motel in Alabama, thus bringing together the catalytic elements that resulted
in the musical movement called “Punk.” The Sex Pistols were the forefathers of
that movement.
In the late seventies, Britain's social upheaval was severe. A stagnant
economy, unemployment, race riots, looting, and strikes intersected with a
strong distaste for royalty and the upper class. A working class revolution
was in the works. Punk music was its Gabriel’s Trumpet, and the Pistols were
blowing with all of their might.
With this backdrop, the film then beautifully intertwines social commentary
with television commercials of the time, footage of riots, and various news
reports. The film then juxtaposes current and past interviews with all five
band members as well as home footage of the bandmates’ childhood (including a
rare interview with Sid Vicious before his death in 1978). The intimacy of
these interviews and the evidence of the social strife validate the actions of
the members of the Pistols and really makes you feel what the band was trying
to convey in the words and rhythms of its music.
Julian Temple was also responsible for the first film concerning the rise and
fall of the Sex Pistols: The Great Rock and Roll Swindle. That film painted
the Pistols as a brilliant marketing tool in the hands of their manager,
Malcolm MacLaren. The Filth and the Fury sets the record straight for the
first time. It gives great insight into the motivations of the Pistols, but it
also gives the uneducated a great perspective on how the Punk movement began
and how it all came hurtling to a blind halt by commercialism, social pressure,
and the fear of individuality.
Eat the rich.
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Review by Max Messier
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