Quote from: Fluid Fetish on August 09, 2016, 01:02:10 AM
Just watched the old punk movie Suburbia the other night which was actually alright, I like that the director used actual punk kids rather then training actors or anything. Seeing TSOL when they're in their early 20's playing live for a minute is pretty fantastic too, I actually cracked up when the singer hit the skinhead kid in the back of the head and caused the brawl. Despite being a feel good movie it has several pretty violent scenes with extremely young kids getting killed in brutal ways to start and end the movie. Good way to open and close a film even though it isn't too over the top/gory and not graphic at all I still imagine it was shocking for people at the time (early 80's), along with the original Assault on Precinct 13 I'd guess it probably played a role in cementing the taboo of showing children being killed in mainstream movies.
Too bad that most of Spheeris other movies are dreadful.
I do have a soft spot for early 80's punk and edge of punk movies.
Repo Man, Get Crazy, Dogs in Space, Decline and Fall... and Urggh a Music War.
I am forgetting a bunch. What I love is that for all those movies get right (Dogs in Space was very much like my life in the 80's) they so often do the TV punks thing, which is innacurate but just so cartoonishly great.
Get Crazy is an accidental masterpiece. It has the dubious distinction of marking the nadir of Malcolm Mcdowell's acting career. About 10 years after Clockwork Orange?
It also features Ed Begley jr and Robert Picardo. Musically its 20 odd bands covering Hoochie Coochie Man.
Also drug references and McDowell talking to his penis.