The most interesting thing about this article, to me, was that apparently nobody can decide how to spell the title. Is it "right" or "rite"? Even Wikipedia can't decide, mentioning both alternatives:
The film poster says "Right", the trailer says "Right"; seems pretty conclusive. I'm really not clear why most articles say "Rite".
Wikipedia in particular should know better, but they already have a problem with cluelessly pedantic hypercorrection (https://xkcd.com/1167/). I keep expecting them to try to "correct" Pet Sematary.
If you have the slightest chance interest in the Sex Pistols, punk rock, or even the story of how something small and sincere can shake up an industry and culture, check out the documentary The Filth and The Fury. It covers some of the same territory as DOA, but I think better captures the cultural and economic stagnation in the 70s.
Sharing this wonderful two minute '80s Japanese overview of British punk for no real reason other than that I happened upon it the other day: http://www.dailymotion.com/video/x4ryjm
Wow the Sex Pistols a corporate created punk band aka the Nsync of punk. I have no idea why anyone even cares about this band besides the horror and evilness which is Sid Vicious (Edit I said Johnny Rotten but Im not far off).
"The Sex Pistols were the brainchild of young entrepreneur Malcolm McLaren."
Nothing drives my Punk Rock childhood crazy then people putting this corporate fake band some honor. Rant over.
I assume you mean Sid Vicious rather than Johnny Rotten, a smart and articulate guy whose other band, Public Image Ltd deserves plenty of acclaim regardless of whether or not they are punk “enough”.
It’s not like Malcolm McLaren was the Simon Cowell of his era. He started out as a shop keeper, had deep ties to the scene, and was an artist himself.
Plenty of worthwhile bands have had a leg up from well connected people over the years. At the very least it brings visibility to other artists in the genre and it certainly shouldn’t detract from your enjoyment of Holidays In The Sun.
Regardless of their talent or authenticity or whatever, they were a hugely influential band and their lack of talent encouraged a lot of people to start their own, better bands.
I think authenticity is hugely over rated. Believe me, every band you’ve ever loved is a corporate creation or a sell out on some level.
>"Wow the Sex Pistols a corporate created punk band aka the Nsync of punk."
What an incredibly uninformed thing to say. I guess you don't know that it was their legendary gig in Manchester in 1976 that actually kicked off the whole "Punk" movement? See:
Also Paul Cook and Steven Jones had a band called the Strand years before they met Malcolm McLaren. And it was Bernie Rhodes(the Clash's manager) that got Johnny Lydon to join the Pistols. Malcom McLaren ran an independent clothing store that sold t-shirts and bondage inspired clothing. How is any of that even remotely corporate? Or even remotely comparable to a boy band?
>"I have no idea why anyone even cares about this band band .."
There are so many great bands that formed because they were inspired by the Sex Pistols - The Clash, Buzzcocks, The Smiths, The Fall, The Pretenders, Magazine, X-Ray Spex, Joy Division, Siouxsie and the Banshees [1][2]. In fact probably most of the great post-punk that came out of England between the late 70s and early 80s.
Their whole ethos was "anybody could do it." You can not get any more DIY and any less corporate than that. They were actually a reaction to the corporate state of music at the time.
You might want to read up on your rock history a bit.
16 comments
[ 2.2 ms ] story [ 42.1 ms ] threadhttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/D.O.A.:_A_Rite_of_Passage
Wikipedia in particular should know better, but they already have a problem with cluelessly pedantic hypercorrection (https://xkcd.com/1167/). I keep expecting them to try to "correct" Pet Sematary.
However, you seem to be correct. Since the poster and trailer agree, it seems that the title is "right".
Edit: I eventually went googling for it, and disappointed I need BlueRay/DVD to view. It can't be hard to distribute digitally these days....
"The Sex Pistols were the brainchild of young entrepreneur Malcolm McLaren."
Nothing drives my Punk Rock childhood crazy then people putting this corporate fake band some honor. Rant over.
https://www.rollingstone.com/music/artists/the-sex-pistols/b...
It’s not like Malcolm McLaren was the Simon Cowell of his era. He started out as a shop keeper, had deep ties to the scene, and was an artist himself.
Plenty of worthwhile bands have had a leg up from well connected people over the years. At the very least it brings visibility to other artists in the genre and it certainly shouldn’t detract from your enjoyment of Holidays In The Sun.
I think authenticity is hugely over rated. Believe me, every band you’ve ever loved is a corporate creation or a sell out on some level.
What an incredibly uninformed thing to say. I guess you don't know that it was their legendary gig in Manchester in 1976 that actually kicked off the whole "Punk" movement? See:
http://www.openculture.com/2015/06/the-sex-pistols-1976-manc...
Also Paul Cook and Steven Jones had a band called the Strand years before they met Malcolm McLaren. And it was Bernie Rhodes(the Clash's manager) that got Johnny Lydon to join the Pistols. Malcom McLaren ran an independent clothing store that sold t-shirts and bondage inspired clothing. How is any of that even remotely corporate? Or even remotely comparable to a boy band?
>"I have no idea why anyone even cares about this band band .."
There are so many great bands that formed because they were inspired by the Sex Pistols - The Clash, Buzzcocks, The Smiths, The Fall, The Pretenders, Magazine, X-Ray Spex, Joy Division, Siouxsie and the Banshees [1][2]. In fact probably most of the great post-punk that came out of England between the late 70s and early 80s.
Their whole ethos was "anybody could do it." You can not get any more DIY and any less corporate than that. They were actually a reaction to the corporate state of music at the time.
You might want to read up on your rock history a bit.
[1] http://www.manchestereveningnews.co.uk/whats-on/music-nightl...
[2] https://www.theguardian.com/music/2012/dec/21/rocks-backpage...