Gimme Danger (2016)

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Gimme Danger: Directed by Jim Jarmusch. With Iggy Pop, Jim Jarmusch, Bob Waller, The Stooges. An in-depth look at legendary punk band The Stooges.

“So what is this? A quite conventional musical documentary embedding a bands history within a bigger history of society and musical appearances and hereby constantly arguing the uniqueness, the coolness and the relevance of The Stooges and their professional anti-professionalism. It has the same sort of bohemian snobbish feeling to it I already found disgusting in ONLY LOVERS LEFT ALIVE: all this bitter mystifying praise of the „realu0026quot;, „authenticu0026quot;, „goodu0026quot;, „trueu0026quot;, etc., artistic stuff within a devilish sell-out Disneyland world is just soo much emphasized that itu0026#39;s actually ridiculing itself. u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eBut at the same time it is a fanboy work and a work of friendship, a film not only about the band, but a film in dedication for the band, a gift, an openly political and explicitly personal attempt to immortalize the musicians, communists, existentialists, drug users and drug abusers around Iggy Pop: „The Stooges Forever!u0026quot;, it says on the gong starting and finishing the film. And this is basically the sole purpose the film is made for and this is what adds quite a bit of intimidating intimacy to it, making it more like a letter to Iggy only masked as this educational musical documentary it is trying to be at its surface. This is no offense: The naive and sincere face under the mask is what turns the film into touching cinema, after all. And the sound, well, the sound made me heart jump around hard every once in a while.”

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