A music documentary exploring the turbulent, controversial and often unbelievable 30 year history of British post-punk industrial band Killing Joke.A music documentary exploring the turbulent, controversial and often unbelievable 30 year history of British post-punk industrial band Killing Joke.A music documentary exploring the turbulent, controversial and often unbelievable 30 year history of British post-punk industrial band Killing Joke.
- Awards
- 1 nomination
Photos
- Self
- (archive footage)
- …
- Self
- (as Ken 'Geordie' Walker)
- …
- Self
- (archive footage)
- …
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- Quotes
Jaz Coleman: Man's behavior patterns when scrutinized with true objectivity force us to accept the unyielding conclusion that he is an irrational primeval beast. He needs, he needs magic and miracles to dominate his existence. His unconscious mind yearns for this.
Jaz Coleman: The higher you reach to the gods of light the lower you must plunge to the gods of darkness.
As it turns out the band have an interesting history, particularly with their Occultism background, and this kind of explains the power and shape of the music.
However 2.5 hours is waaay too long for a rockumentary and there was a lot of waffle it could've done without. As well, it must be a top contender in the worse movie sound awards. Much of the dialogue is drowned in soundtrack or lost in sinister rumble or is just plain badly recorded. There's no excuse for it unless you've only got found footage. Fortunately the music audio was OK. Unfortunately there wasn't enough of it.
The other problem is that if you're not a fan, you're not gonna follow the plot. Assumptions are made that the viewer already knows that A) followed B). And when events unfold via incomprehensible mumbling, well, good luck with that. Between the film's length and the crap audio, I found myself drifting off, because it couldn't make me care about what bloke 1 and bloke 2 were saying.
On the plus side, it was nice to get to know the lads, each of them characters essential to the tale and for the undeniable chemical reaction. A glimpse into the fiery mind of Jaz Coleman was fascinating, although, watching in 2022, the frequent references to 'energy' and such feel dated and a bit cheesy, pinned to that Gen X era . The earnest prophetic 'storm coming' bits at the end made me wonder if Jaz might today be a QAnonner. It's a kind of Magick.
Killing Joke are one of the sharpest and most original British bands ever, so it was definitely worth making a film about them. Maybe a better one than this though.
(The graphics/animation in the closing credits was great though.)
- Gretchen_X
- Jan 8, 2022
- Permalink
Details
Box office
- Budget
- $500,000 (estimated)
- Runtime2 hours 30 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.78 : 1