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The Filth and the Fury - A Sex Pistols Film |  
List Price: $19.98 
Your Price: $15.98 | 
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| Product Info | 
Reviews | 
 
 Features:
 - Color
 - Closed-captioned
 - Widescreen
 - Dolby
 
  
 Description:
  "Ever get the feeling you've been cheated?" sneers Johnny Rotten at the  Sex Pistols' farewell performance. After seeing this picture you'll  understand his disgust, but Julian Temple's sharp portrait of the ragged,  raw band of working-class Brits won't leave you disappointed. The Sex  Pistols left their legacy in a whirlwind 26-month reign, spitting out a  caustic, confrontational brand of rock & roll that became the rallying  cry for angry, disaffected youths in late 1970s England and defined the  punk movement. Their story was first told two decades ago in the cynical The  Great Rock and Roll Swindle, also directed by Temple but produced by  the Sex Pistols' smarmy manager, Malcolm McLaren, who stage-managed the film  into  a self-promoting vanity project. For The Filth and the Fury, Temple  turns to the four surviving band members to tell their own stories. His  vibrant, vigorous direction captures the period of social unrest and  alienated youth without turning into a history lesson, and shows the Pistols  in all their insolent glory: spewing obscenities and gesturing lewdly to  audiences and press alike, screaming out lyrics, overcoming musical  limitations with pure passion and attitude. Rare, raw concert footage  (including their final performance, which is appropriately enough the song  "No Fun") and previously unseen interviews with the deceased Sid Vicious  further energize the portrait. There's even footage of the smiling band  cutting cake for kids at a fundraiser with nary a nasty gesture or sneering  comment. Now there's a side of the Pistols you don't see everyday.  --Sean Axmaker
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