"You can be a punk in photography, in journalism, in literature, you just have to think through history. You can see other punk attitudes that have nothing to do with music. I'd even venture to say we don't need any more damn musicians." - Don Letts -
A documentary that covers the history of the political punk band Anti-Flag. The film features interviews with famous musicians such as Tom Morello, Billy Bragg, Tim McIlrath, and Brian Baker. The documentary shows the challenges and difficulties faced by those who play political music and dedicate their lives to activism.
A four-part American documentary series. Each episode focuses on a different era, from the protopunk movement of the '60s to the present day, providing a comprehensive overview of the evolution and impact of punk. The series not only showcases the musical revolution but also the rebellious spirit and creative energy that inspired generations and continues to have a tangible effect on pop culture.
The Godfathers of Hardcore explores the story of Roger Miret and Vinnie Stigma, defining figures of hardcore punk – offering a glimpse into how they shaped the music scene at the forefront of Agnostic Front.
The film RUDEBOY presents the story of the legendary Trojan Records with archive footage, interviews, and narrative elements, showcasing a key player in the cultural revolution on British dancefloors in the late '60s and early '70s.
In 1993, GG Allin died of a heroin overdose at just 37 years old – his death became a myth, just like his life. Award-winning director Sami Saif's documentary, THE ALLINS, offers a loving and entertaining glimpse into the daily lives of the controversial singer's family, while shedding new light on the punk icon's legacy.
My Degeneration
1989
Documentary
6.9/10 (IMDb)
Director:
Jon Moritsugu
Writer:
Daryl Chin
Length:
61 min
Language:
English
Cast:
Amy Davis, Lesley Grant, Lisa Guay, Andy Luck
Jon Moritsugu's first feature, My Degeneration, followed a string of well-received shorts, including 1987's Der Elvis, which was chosen by the Village Voice as one of the 50 best films of the 1980s. His next film, the awesomely primitive grunge-punk MY DEGENERATION (1989), about a female rock group that sells out to the meat industry, was originally slated for thirty minutes and stretched out with a practically 1-to-1 shooting ratio into a feature length seventy minutes. Again the live footage was leavened with all manner of experimental interludes from negative frames to emulsion scratching to model shots and crude animation. Except for getting your ankle chewed by a rat, this film remains the most low-tech experience you can have in a movie-theater, and while his two previous shorts were usually screened in galleries and bars, the feature length of MY DEGENERATION conditioned people to except something closer to a "real movie" and this made the final product seem all the more radical. While the film got some good reviews, others weren't prepared for such a thoroughly primitive movie-going experience and introduced him to his first rabidly negative press -- and it seems to have somehow energized him. MY DEGENERATION remains in many ways his most radical and gutsiest film. Moritsugu was a fan of the French New Wave and the immediacy of those films, but it was John Water's damn-the-torpedoes gutbucket approach to movie-making that exerted the most obvious influence on his first three films, all of which were stylistically very similar. They figure today as key contributions to punk cinema and led him, in the late eighties, to be lumped in with the NYC-based "Cinema of Transgression" who were also showing their films in galleries, bars and any underground dive big enough to set up a projector in. But he never fit in comfortably with the black leather crowd. The fact that he was a University student, and looks back positively on the experience, should be enough by itself to disqualify him from inclusion into this "movement". MY DEGENERATION burlesqued the eighties punk scene with the same low tech piss and vinegar that PINK FLAMINGOS burlesqued the trash-hippie scene, but it wasn't 1972 anymore and there was no midnight movie boom to give life to a feral child like this - although amazingly it was selected that year for both the Sundance and Toronto Film Festivals - both bastions of mainstream status-quo film ideology. MY DEGENERATION will hang forever like a skeleton in their closets.

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