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The Filth and the Fury

  • Is it age appropriate?

    About our ratings

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    Not age appropriate for kids under 16, age appropriate for kids over 17; suggested age 16.

  • Is it any good?

    3.0
  • Common Sense says

    Best for older teens, especially Sex Pistols fans.

Why We Rated This iffy for Ages 16–17

What to watch out for

  • Messages:

    Class issues
  • Violence:

    References to violence, sad deaths
  • Sex:

    Frequent sexual references
  • Language:

    Very strong language
  • Consumerism:

    Not an issue.
  • Drinking, drugs, & smoking:

    Many references to drugs and alcohol, death by heroin overdose

What Parents Need to Know

This review of The Filth and the Fury was written by Nell Minow

Parents need to know that this movie includes very strong language, drug use (though a powerful anti-drug message), and explicit sexual references.

Families Can Talk About

Talk to your kids about the media in their life. We have more tools and tips that can help
  • Families can talk about the role of rebellion, the influence of the Sex Pistols, and who is closest today to the role they played.
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More on The Filth and the Fury

What’s the Story?

Twenty years ago, director Julien Temple made The Great Rock and Roll Swindle, a documentary about British punk band the Sex Pistols from the point of view of their manager, Malcolm McLaren, who was presented as a Svengali who conceived and marketed the group. Now, Temple returns with another take on the same story, as the surviving Sex Pistols tell their side. According to the band members, McLaren was incompetent and corrupt. He played no part in creating the band; all he did was market them badly and take all their money. Johnny Rotten (John Lydon) talks about their origins as furious and iconoclastic working-class boys who wanted to make people think about what was going on all around them – and about what was not going on. When the Sex Pistols formed, thousands were on welfare, and cuts in services left people feeling helpless. The Sex Pistols wanted the working class to question the system, and to fight back. They did everything they could to offend and enjoyed the horrified reactions. But there were a few things that they were not at all prepared to deal with, namely McLaren and band mate Sid Vicious' eventual heroin addiction. Speaking in shadows, Lydon breaks down in tears when he talks about how he could not save his friend.

Is It Any Good?

Temple, who was around when the band was together, clearly has the trust of the surviving members. He shoots them in shadows, so our visual image of them is not diluted by signs of aging. We see their present-day recollections over footage of themselves more than two decades ago. Temple skillfully intercuts scenes from music hall performers, Laurence Olivier's Richard III and Hamlet, contemporary commentators, and The Great Rock and Roll Swindle to provide a sense of context and contrast. The movie also reveals some fascinating details about the band members.

The Sex Pistols were enormously influential, and many rock bands found some inspiration in their willingness to take on any authority. For a brief time, they played the role of the child who tells the emperor he has no clothes. As one band member says, "I question everything. I always have done." Not a bad slogan for rock and roll, for adolescence, or even for everyone.

Movie Details

Studio: Warner Bros., Director: Julien Temple
Run time: 108 minutes
Theatrical release: 4/28/2000
MPAA Rating: R for language, drug use, and sexual references

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