24小时狂欢派对

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主演:史蒂夫·库根,约翰·汤姆森,保罗·帕波维尔,连尼·詹姆斯,雪莉·亨德森,帕迪·康斯戴恩,Raymond,Waring,罗恩·库克,约翰·西姆,丹尼·坎宁安,Dave,Gorman,纳尔夫·李特,安迪·瑟金斯,奈杰尔·皮瓦罗,马丁·汉考克,彼得·凯,Mark,E.,Smith,娜奥米·拉德克利夫,西恩·哈里斯,罗伯·布莱顿,恩佐·科伦蒂,尼尔·贝尔,西蒙·佩吉,Elizabeth,Kelly,克里斯·乔奇,彼得·冈恩,玛吉·克拉克,曼尼,Clint,Boon,基兰·奥布莱恩,凯特·玛蔻温,Sean,Cern

类型:电影地区:英国语言:英语年份:2002

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 剧照

24小时狂欢派对 剧照 NO.124小时狂欢派对 剧照 NO.224小时狂欢派对 剧照 NO.324小时狂欢派对 剧照 NO.424小时狂欢派对 剧照 NO.524小时狂欢派对 剧照 NO.624小时狂欢派对 剧照 NO.1324小时狂欢派对 剧照 NO.1424小时狂欢派对 剧照 NO.1524小时狂欢派对 剧照 NO.1624小时狂欢派对 剧照 NO.1724小时狂欢派对 剧照 NO.1824小时狂欢派对 剧照 NO.1924小时狂欢派对 剧照 NO.20

 长篇影评

 1 ) 一路飞到底,最后终于见了上帝

上世纪80至90年代,曼彻斯特涌现过两股特立独行的音乐潮流,世人戏称“曼彻斯特‘疯’潮”(Madchester)。它的感觉是这么好,以至于大洋彼岸那些疯狂且有才华的人都从这种东西里吸取了营养,去获得它。而对于曼彻斯特,这远远不止昙花一现的音乐流派那么简单。当时的曼城既充斥着幻灭,又饱受足球流氓暴力亚文化和爱尔兰共和军炸弹的双重滋扰,而音乐给全城上下注入了一股凝聚力。这是一种文化上的基因突变,支持这样突变的土壤里,那些厂牌、俱乐部、乐队、制作人的名字作为一种无可替代的绝对存在而至今在曼城的各种音乐地标里变成一种革命性的意义,继续改变着曼城人和被吸引者的灵魂。

剧照

与其用乐队纪录片(快乐分部、快乐星期一、新秩序等)来描述,不如说《24小时狂欢派对》提取了一些看似是配戏的关键因素和人物,比如天才制作人Martin Hannett,比如工厂,比如庄园俱乐部,比如Tony那一纸血书厂牌宣言——

“所有的乐队都拥有他们的音乐,以及随时滚蛋的自由”。

每一种主义、每一种风格都与它的发生地有无法脱离的关系,有些发生通过孕育,而有些则通过传输。 像前段时间刚结束的,来自中国的梅志勇和⋯联手开展的一个45天的黑洞巡演,堪称噪音界劳模,他们“激烈地向中国大陆,香港,澳门,日本和韩国进发。他们在各自的艺术作品中完全自由且不负责任,他们是迁就的终结者。音乐和声音,视觉和表演,随时被他们每个人公开露面时強力宣泄的愤怒吹走,每一种必要的手段都会被吸走,用使用过的和重塑过的,把纯粹的赞美传递给一个混乱的而且美丽的生活。” 他们让流浪的观众觉得,不在这里的时候才是真正强烈的在这里。

zero a martin hannett story 1977-1991

而那些支撑这些巡演的场地方,背后的组织者,主办方,制作者,一个被生硬概括为“产业链”的美妙聚集,那些令其发声而发生的场所,那一长串巡演场地名单则是永远的聆听者。它们尽一切可能使之发生,甚至记录、传播,绞碎每一片肉体。回眼看我们的祖国大地,许多音乐人同样采取精简而直接的方式将作品喂养给自己的听众群体,而正如上面所提到的,各种对发生方式的不同选择,尤其对于听众而言,属于创作的范畴。所以某种程度上来说,与一些常规劳动服务产业不同的是,音乐是一场集体创作,但也同时具备“种瓜得瓜种豆得豆”的逻辑属性。

(正在听上面的橙色封面的专辑,出神了,由衷地崇拜了一下)

值得一提的是,本片导演迈克尔·温特伯顿也是充满争议的《九歌》的导演,不仅在镜头剪辑包括故事叙事上别具一格,一些可爱或者血腥的边角料的奇异景象也穿插其中,让片子看起来像一份经过认真考虑了赠送对象的需求和喜好后精心制作的礼物。

但片子对乐队的着墨并不像同类片子一样多,所以我不认为它是那种for fans only的自赏电影,通过夹杂其中的对发生背景的细微描述,在伴随炸弹恐惧产生的对后朋、舞曲类音乐的渴望,乐队、厂牌、听众、歌迷、场地、制作人等等,他们支撑的是一个怎样的幻想?也许看完之后,我们可以聊聊在商业图景下的当代社会里,又有多少泡沫在伪装,又有多少真实在孤芳自赏。

或者聊聊这个

一路飞到底,直到见了上帝

直接飞去见上帝

有区别吗?

隔壁电影·MAO场5月

荐片人 张亮

 2 ) 24 Hour Party People Scripts

Is it a bird? Is it a pIane? No, it's the Iatest craze sweeping the Pennines. I've got to be honest. I'd rather be sweeping the Pennines right now. You're supposed to have three weeks' training for this. Granada Reports don't have that kind of money. So, I'm afraid I'm just gonna IiteraIIy Iaunch myseIf off this mountain. This is, very possibIy, the Iate Tony WiIson for Granada Reports. Wish me Iuck. Just puII the bar in to get controI back again. Hear it fIapping, it's okay. If it stops, I'm in troubIe. ExactIy. PuII it tiII it fIaps again. One, two, three, go. I'm fIying! This is a physicaI... ...high. A physicaI, IegaI high. This is the most amazing feeIing, better than sex. Forward, forward. Oh, shit! HeIp! There's a barbed-wire fence. Shit. Fucking heII! WeII, I'm battered... ...I'm bruised... ...I've done something rather unfortunate to my coccyx... ...I'm sIightIy upset, and I'm utterIy eIated. I'II definiteIy be doing it again. This is Tony WiIson, a shadow of his former seIf... ...for Granada Reports. Back to the studio. Take care. I'II be in touch, because it was so exciting. -I'd Iove to do it again. -No probIem. Okay. Cheerio. You're gonna be seeing a Iot more of that sort of thing in the fiIm. AII of that actuaIIy did happen. ObviousIy, it's symboIic. It works on both IeveIs. I don't want to teII you too much, don't want to spoiI the fiIm. But I'II just say ''Icarus.'' Okay? Doesn't matter if you don't understand. But you shouId probabIy read more. -How's the birdman of Derbyshire? -Not bad. Love the hang-gIiding, mate. Loved it. You see? What are you compIaining about? He doesn't have to deaI with the consequences of-- The consequences? He won't contend with the possibiIity of death. You're insured. How's that supposed to be of any comfort to me? Look, I reaIize the danger invoIved. I'II come up with-- Let me teII you, I'm not doing any more kamikaze stuff, ever. That's it. -HeIIo, Tony. -HeIIo. PauI, AIan. I've got the tickets. -AIan, did you see the hang-gIiding articIe? -I did. WeII done. Wasn't it briIIiant? We had peopIe phoning in. -I know they did. -It's what the pubIic want. I know, but the pubIic, Iet me teII you, Iike pubIic executions. I went to Cambridge University, CharIes. I'm a serious fucking journaIist... ...Iiving in one of the most important fucking times of human history. -There's no need to swear. -I mean it. The Buzzcocks can't play, because we're not ready. So, it's just the Sex Pistols. June 4, 1976. The Sex PistoIs pIay Manchester for the very first time. There are onIy 42 peopIe in the audience... ...but every singIe one of them is feeding on a power, an energy and a magic. Inspired, they wiII go out and perform wondrous deeds. For instance, Howard Devoto at the front... ...Pete SheIIey at the back... ...they organized this gig. They're way ahead of everyone in Manchester. They're aIready the Buzzcocks. Howard Iater sIeeps with my wife. Behind me are Stiff Kittens. Soon to become Warsaw, Iater to become Joy Division. FinaIIy to become New Order. Ginger-nut... ...Mick HucknaII. That's John the Postman. He's a postman. And that guy dancing at the front, that's Martin Hannett... ...the onIy bona fide genius in this story. One of the onIy two bona fide geniuses in this story. He wiII Iater try to kiII me. Good night, Manchester. Thanks for your bullshit. Must go. Not David. He goes. -What's wrong? -These jeans, they're sort of.... They go right up me crotch. Too tight for you, that's why. I'm teIIing you, they cut straight between my baIIs. You're not a reguIar shape though, are you? Pardon? For jeans. -What do you mean, I'm not a reguIar shape? -You've got big hips. -I've not got big hips. -You have. -I haven't. -You've got huge hips for a man. That's fucking ridicuIous. I haven't big hips. Don't say that. -You've got bigger hips than me. -That's fucking buIIshit. It's reaIIy good stuff, isn't it? This is good. Where did you get it from? Mate of mine brought it back from his hoIidays. What, Caribbean? RhyI. The Sun Center in RhyI. Right. I wouId describe it as history. How can it be history? There were onIy 42 peopIe at the gig. So what? How many peopIe were at the Last Supper? TweIve. Thirteen, incIuding Jesus. -Have you recovered? -Yeah. -But it's not documented. -In other words, not many. How many peopIe were at the murder of JuIius Caesar? I don't know. You teII me. Five. Shut up, then. I'm Tony WiIson. Here we are, as we are, So it Goes. On tonight's show, I'II be taIking to AIice Cooper from the ApoIIo. ApparentIy, he'II be hanging a dwarf, Iive on stage. But first, two minutes of the most important music... ...since EIvis waIked into the Sun Studios in Memphis. The Sex PistoIs and Anarchy in the UK. in 1976... ...two or three people controlled all the music on television. And they didn't like punk. For a year... ...if you wanted to see the most exciting bands in the world... ...they were on a regional show coming out of Manchester. My show. The StrangIers. Amazing. -CIass act, that. -They're shit. -They're a bunch of wankers. -Language. This is better. This guy.... I fucking Iove this guy. This guy is fantastic. Listen to that voice. -Listen to him. -Looks a bit homo, though, with that-- That's part of it. The big handIebar, drop-handIe mustache. -I don't know about that. -BriIIiant. The guy with the handIebar mustache, that is KarI Denver. This is Shaun Ryder, and that one is PauI. Later, they become the Happy Mondays and get KarI Denver to sing with them. We'II be hearing more from the Happy Mondays Iater. But right now, I'm getting a IittIe bit tired of just putting bands on teIevision... ...so I'm about to open a Iive music venue. -Isn't it a bit of a dump? -Not Las Vegas, is it? Go round to the Ieft. There's dog shite everywhere. It's disgusting. It's urban. It's exciting. It's exactIy the pIace we shouId be. You don't think those kids'II nick the car, do you? They're not gonna nick the car. Are you sure? -Right, the reason we're here reaIIy is-- -Margaret? Because of the expIosion in music, with New Wave... ...there's Iots of exciting bands happening... ...and I think that, cuIturaIIy, Manchester's sIightIy Iagging behind. If you want to get into a nightcIub, you've gotta dress Iike a hairdresser. -The wife's a hairdresser. -That's great. But some peopIe aren't, and they've got a right to dance and party. I'm Tonay. -Hi, nice to meet you. -Sorry, this is Tony. Tonay doesn't beIieve in teIevision. I was just saying, 'cause it's funny, 'cause Tony's on the teIIy. You know what I caII teIevision? The idiot box. -Idiot box. -Yeah, there's a Iot of rubbish on. Right, we spIit the door 60-40 to me. The band, they get a crate of aIe. You can have Fridays. -Look round whiIe I do the tiII. -Okay. Thank you. -It stinks in here. -There's a probIem. You never toId me he was caIIed Tony. Who? What's up? Tony. There's two Tonys. Straightaway, that's a.... Can you not see how that's a potentiaI probIem? He's in charge of the cIub. I'm supposed to be in charge of what we're doing. There's two Tonys on equaI pegging. There's a confrontation. Who's Tony number one and two? We need some sort of differentiation. But he's not caIIed Tony, is he? He's caIIed Tonay. You know, Don Tonay. It's his fucking surname, Tone. -Is it? -Yeah. It's a bit grubby. I know it's grubby, but we can get it cIeaned up for the nights we're in. That's worse. What is worse? WeII.... I'm sorry to harp on about this, but that makes him Mr. Tonay... -...and I'm just pIain Tony. -What's wrong with that? There's a hierarchy there, straightaway. ''Mr. Tonay'' is more important than ''Tony.'' ''HeIIo, Mr. Tonay. Yes, no, mister.'' And just pIain oId Tony. ''Tony, me mate, Tony....'' I've gotta have some credibiIity. Why don't you just caII him Don? How about that? See if he goes for that. CaII him Don. Don. What kind of music are you gonna be bringing in? -Sort of New Wave. -Kind of indie. -Indian? -No, indie. Don't want any of that ska. I don't Iike that ska. Okay. Don't want that. A notion I'II Ieave you with is heavy metaI. Get one of them bands. They drink Iike the fucking Queen Mother. Right. -Leave you with that. -Nice car, Don. She's thirsty. See you, Don. -I think the name thing went okay. -He heard you that time. I was gonna be a Don. I was gonna be a VirgiI tiII me mum Iost her bottIe at the Iast minute. -He means he was gonna be a don. -I went to Cambridge. What about a name for the cIub? CaII it ''Factory.'' -I Iike that. It's a bit Andy WarhoI. -It's a bit L.S. Lowry. I just saw a sign on the waII, said, ''Factory CIosing''... ...and I thought, we can have one going, ''Factory Opening.'' Reverse the trend. MaI, when you come down to me, can you make sure you just get a gIimpse of my boot? If it's on-screen I get a cIothing aIIowance. No probIem. That is The CIash. This was So it Goes. And, as it goes, so it went. It's aII over. If you want to hear good music now, you'II have to get off the couch. Go down to the Factory night at the RusseII CIub, every Friday. Go forth and preach the gospeI. Good night. There's quite a few. If they've started Ietting them in, then that's a good crowd. -Fucking cunt. -Wanker. -That's originaI. -Like your hair. -Fuck you. -Why does he Iet peopIe taIk to him Iike that? He doesn't care what they say, as Iong as they're taIking about him. You know that, AIan. -Someone who Iikes me. -I Iove you. Sign this for me? -What's your name? -John. -HeIIo, Mark. -Hi. AII right? I reaIIy miss your program, so, I thought to get it back on teIIy. -I've spoken to-- -He don't want it to come back. He wants it to be gone forever, so it can become a Iegend. Don't you? There is a man with a grasp of semiotics. There's your answer. -Can I get you haIf a Iager? -You can get me a pint. Right, okay. Fine. WiIson, you fucking cunt! That's originaI. Your drink's coming. -Is he a friend of yours? -He's our singer. How are you, Steve? Hi. Tony WiIson. PIeased to meet you. Is he gonna hit me? -You're quite cIose to me there. -I know. I wanna be. -Why? -Because you're a cunt, mate. I know, I heard you the first time. You got to stop him singing. It's avant-garde. You wouIdn't understand it. He's very poor. -It's provocative. -ProvocativeIy poor. AppaIIingIy poor. They're not caIIing you the new George Epstein, you know. -It's Brian Epstein. -George Epstein, BeatIes' manager. -That's Brian Epstein, dickhead. -George Epstein. -It's fucking Brian Epstein. -Brian Martin. -It's not Brian, it's George Martin. -Brian Martin, the producer-- -TeII him to fuck off. -Let's sit down. You're just fucking wrong. The introduction's not usually this long. i think the singer's in the toilet. Where have you been, you twat? -60-40 to you, we said, didn't we? -Yeah. Smashing. There's Pou1. Get yourseIf a drink. Come with me. Come on, foIIow your UncIe Tonay. Through here. I don't do any coke. Where are we going? It's just that I've got... ...you know.... -Come on. -What are we doing? -Let's have a nosh to seaI the bargain. -I've eaten actuaIIy, Don. We're not gonna be eating, my friend. When the Don's hungry, the Don eats. HeIIo, girIs. Your UncIe Don's here. Come on. Jump in, Tony. Don't be shy. Come on. Come on, girIs. On your knees and eat. -Where is he? -Where's who, babe? -Tony. I can't find him. -I think he went outside with Don. -Do you mind if I just put-- -Take it aII off. -Is it okay if I just poke it through the side? -No. That's what I normaIIy do. -I think it's too big for that. -Come on, don't be shy. -Is that what you do at home? -That's what I do at home. FeeI that. Just have a feeI. That's nice, that, innit? Do you mind if I touch your tits whiIe you're doing it? Thank you. Go on. Put that on your TV show. Hey, shut the fucking door. -It's not how it Iooks, Iove. -Come in, Iove. What are you doing, Tony? It's not how it Iooks, aII right? Don put me up to it. I didn't know what I was doing. He made me do it. -It's not how it seems. -Are you coming in? -If you're not coming in, then fuck off. -Leave it, that's my wife. What are you doing, Tony? That's my wife. Listen, I Iove you. Can you finish me off? God bIess. HeIIo. Posters, Tony. You've got the posters? This is the fucking gig. I know. It took ages to get the right yeIIow. The gig's over. I know. That's fucking great, actuaIIy. It's reaIIy nice. It's beautifuI, but useIess. And as WiIIiam Morris once said, ''Nothing useIess can be truIy beautifuI.'' -AII right, Tone? -Yeah. -Heather, this is Tony WiIson. -HeIIo, Iove. Have you seen Lindsay? She went off with Howard. She just caught me getting a bIow job off a hooker... ...in the back of a van. I better go and get her. Excuse me. -Hi, Tony. -Hi. Have you got the car keys? -In me bag. -Thanks. I onIy got a bIow job. That's fuII penetration. -See you, Howard. -See you, Tony. AII right? I definiteIy don't remember this happening. This is the real Howard Devoto. He and Lindsay insisted we made clear that this never happened. But i agree with John Ford. When you have to choose between the truth and the legend... ...print the legend. I thought the name of the band was Warsaw. You can't have a band caIIed Warsaw. You can't put it on a poster, can you? PeopIe wouId think it was a hoIiday advert. Joy Division. Do you know what that is, Mr. WiIson? It's when the Nazis... ...picked out raciaIIy pure women and had sex with them. Joy Division, that's us, eh? It's a very Nazi name. -So? -But it's quite cheery as weII. You know, ''joy.'' Like a division of joy, or something. Joy Division. Let's aII say that together. One, two, three. Joy. Look at that fIat-bottomed vaIIey. it wasn't always crazy between me and Lindsay. Most days, we were just another young couple... ...who wanted all the things young couples want. Nice house, nice car and a couple of kids. Enjoy the waIk, because it's just you and me. WouIdn't you Iike a IittIe Tony and a IittIe Lindsay waIking around? It wouId be a nightmare. I Iike to be free. AII right, in time, you know. Okay. That's the Iast word I'II say on the subject. Two words, body cIock. HeIIo, I'm here. The majors are the status quo, and we're not, we're the anarchists. It's gonna be Iike a co-op. We're aII gonna share in the proceeds. We pay for aII the costs, and the rest of it is 50-50. AIan's gonna be head of business affairs. That's Red Leb, that. Have you smeIt it? SmeII that. I'm giving you totaI creative freedom, right? It's dead fucking simpIe. Don't Iike us, fuck off. I don't Iike you, I fuck off. I'II write a contract saying there's no contracts. I'II write it in bIood. -I'II do it. -He's not gonna write it in his own bIood. -Here you are. -I'II do it. You write it in your own bIood. In the words of the great prophet, ''I dares do owt.'' It ain't IegaI, this. -He's done it! -There you go. ReaI bIood. ''I... ''...Tony....'' How can you read that? I'm not sure if that'd stand up in court. What more do you want? He wrote it in his own bIood. Martin? What are you doing? Recording... ...the siIence. You're recording siIence? Now I'm recording Tony fucking WiIson. We want you to produce a band for us. Who's us? Factory Records. Right, 50 quid an hour. PIus, I wanna be a partner in the company. See ya. See ya. Stop that horrible fucking racket, please. What's wrong with it? Nothing was wrong with the drumming as such, it's just that... ...people have been playing like that for about 20,000 years, and quite frankly i'm.... it's boring the arse off me. Let's just try something... ...a lot simpler, okay? Faster, but sIower. -There's Iogic there somewhere. -I know what he means. Right, stop. We've got a rattIe. We're gonna have to dismantIe the whoIe fucking kit. You are? -How Iong's that gonna fucking take? -I don't fucking know. As Iong as it takes. Is this stiII costing us Pou50 an hour? We're stiII working, aren't we? What I'd Iike... ...is to rebuiId it on the roof. On the roof? On the actuaI roof of the studio? BIoody heII. Start pIaying. How wiII I know when to stop? Don't worry about stopping. I'II send someone out when it's time to stop. Sorry. Just remember, Tony Wilson's money. Right, stop. Stop! Fucking retard. -You wear it very well. -What? You wear it very well. Now play like a fucking musician. Fucking prick. -Listen to it in the car. -It'II sound rubbish in the car. I know, but we've got to see what it sounds Iike on a transistor radio. I sound Iike Bowie. -That's good. You Iike Bowie. -I hate fucking Bowie. In All The Young Dudes, he sings about how you shouId die at 25. Do you know how oId he is? He's 30, 29, something. He's a Iiar. Doesn't matter. Many artists produce their best work when they're oIder. W.B. Yeats-- -I've never heard of him. -Yeats is the greatest poet since Dante. -If he'd have died when he was 25-- -I wouId have heard of him. Hang on. -Listen to it. This is great. -This is fucking exceIIent. -Are you Iistening to this? It's great. -It's briIIiant. It is. It's very good. There's nothing out there that sounds Iike that. That's the best thing about it. -You Iike it? -I do. I Iove what he's done with the drums. Joy Division were a great band, but they were Rob's band. i wanted a band of my own. A Certain Ratio had all the talent and energy of Joy Division... ...but better clothes. -You Iook absoIuteIy fantastic. -You reckon? -It's great. -We Iook Iike the bIoody HitIer Youth, man. I think you Iook more Iike Scouts. Have you seen our Iegs? They're Iike fucking miIk bottIes. I wouIdn't worry about it. AIthough that reminds me. I must get some chicken drumsticks on the way home. It's aII right, I've got it covered. Instant tan. Tanfastic. It's hedonism, it's shorts... ...it's funk... -...it's tans, it's sexy. -It's coId, man. I Iike the haircuts, Barney. They Iook good, don't they? -Crap, though. -Fucking shit. What's the worst band name you ever heard? Skinny Monkey. The worst one I heard was a mate of mine's band caIIed Barabbas. Fucking Barabbas. Who do you want? Barabbas! The National Front took to the streets of Manchester today... ...in the biggest demonstration of neo-Fascists since the '30s. The Transport and General Workers Union tighten their stranglehold... ...on the nation's petrol supplies, bringing the country to a grinding halt. Thousands of motorists queue all day, amid rumors of fuel rationing... ...and a return to the three-day week. More chaos in the public services as mountains of rubbish fill London's West End... ...and nurses bring the hospitals close to collapse. Now gravediggers in Liverpool refuse to bury the dead. Ian! -What the fucking heII's the matter with him? -Fuck knows. I don't know. Fucking heII. Ian? Fucking come on then! -What are you doing? -Fuck this. -Rob? What the fuck are you doing? -Come on then, you cunt! Come on then. Watch his head. AII right, mate. Fucking heII. His fucking mouth's bIeeding! Has someone got a doctor? I've just dropped two skinheads. -What are you doing? -He's got me fags. You fucking twat! -He's fucking bIeeding here. -And I need a cigarette. Where's Rob? Can you get a fucking doctor? He's fucking bIeeding here. How do you answer the charge that you're a fascist? What? Joy Division was named after a group of women heId by the SS... ...for the purpose of breeding perfect Aryans. Have you never heard of Situationism or postmodernism? We need a doctor in here. Do you know about the pIay of signs and signifiers? The band's Joy Division. We've aIso got one caIIed Durutti CoIumn. I'm sure I don't need to point out the irony there. -What the fuck's going on? -We need a doctor. -What's wrong with him? -He's having a fit. Fuck off! -Fuck off, or I'II Iay one on you. -He wiII. I've seen him do it. -I'II get a doctor. -CaIm down, Barney. Don't fucking teII me to caIm down! You fucking caIm down! Fine. Fuck's sake. Are you aII right there, Ian? I'm fine, mate. -Are you sure? -I said I'm fine, Rob, yeah? Just shut up. AII right, then. Fair enough. Not even to teII you that we're gonna tour America? Fuck off. I'm teIIing you, straight up, we're gonna tour America. Nice one. Fuck, are you serious? I've just toId you, straight up, you're gonna tour America. -Come on! -Fucking heII, boys. Fucking cheers. We're going to the US of A. Cheers. I can't fucking beIieve that. I thought you'd Iike that. Are we gonna be staying in top-cIass hoteIs? ActuaIIy, you're in knocking shops, and I'm in five-star hoteIs. Suits me fine. I think we did better there, mate. I think I'd better rework that, actuaIIy. Go Ieft. Come by. Peter. I don't want to interrupt your fIow. Go Ieft. -I am doing, obviousIy. -No, you're aII right. AII right. Why a duck? He just started, you know, just by chance. And he just started biting their ankIes. But it doesn't harm them. Not Iike if a dog did it, you know. Right. Extraordinary. -UnbeIievabIe. -Aye. -Have a go. -Can I? What do I do? What do I say? ''Go Ieft.'' -And then do what? -Just shout. -Shout what? -''Go Ieft.'' Oh, shout ''Go Ieft,'' right. Go Ieft. -See? -That's remarkabIe. I've not quite got the command of the.... WhistIe. Can't quite do it that weII. Go Ieft. ''Stick to what you're good at'' is the response... ...unIess you're a duck, and then you can branch out. Hey, Ian. -How are you? -AII right. Is he in? No, he's at Granada. I've got a spIiff going. You gonna come in? I can't. I've got to get back. Cheers. It's fantastic news about America. It's good. I'm Iooking forward to it. I'm reaIIy chuffed. I'm bored. You couId stay with me for a IittIe whiIe. I've got to go. I'II catch him Iater. AII right. I'II teII him you caIIed. -Send you a postcard? -Do. That wouId be great. ''Wish you were here.'' Debbie? So.... Your car is kaput. And your girlfriend is gone. When thine house they have sold.... What I'm gonna do is, apart from asking you any anecdotes about town criers... -...I'II say, ''how is it reIevant today''? -Sorry. And not just being for tourists, so-- -Can I just have a word? -Yes? -The office have just caIIed. -Right. Ian Curtis has died. What do you mean? He's hanged himseIf. He was found at his home this morning. You're joking? No. -I'm sorry. -What.... He's dead? Yeah. What a stupid bIoody bugger. Sorry about this, mate. It's a friend of mine. Ian Curtis... ...Iead singer of Joy Division... ...has died today. It's reaIIy beautifuI. ian Curtis... ...writer of... ...Love WiII Tear Us Apart... ...has died today. I Iike it. I do. if you listen to ian's music and you know that he killed himself... ...then you probabIy imagine some very dark, depressive figure. A prophet of urban decay and aIienation. But I have some wonderfuI memories of him. Such as the very Iast Factory night at the RusseII CIub. Pogo Iike a bastard! We gotta go. Fuck off. Mr. WiIson? Tony, hi. I know this isn't a very good time... ...but I've made a tape of me singing Joy Division songs. You probabIy need a new singer now-- -Don't hang about. -PIay it to the rest of the band-- -Can you give this to him? -I've practiced the dance. -They won't Iet us in. -I'II make sure he gets that. -He meant a Iot to us. -AII right, mate. Thank you for coming. It's not reaIIy the time for autographs, but thanks for coming. MichaeI, what are you doing here? I'm not here as a journaIist. I'm mourning, you know. I'm gutted. -You are gonna write about it? -I don't think I can. -You must. You have to. Come in. -Is that aII right? It's good that you're here. How are you doing? AII right, mate. -I just can't beIieve it. -AII right, mate. It's good to see you. I want you to write the book. You're the right person in the right pIace. You shouId do it. -It's just so soon, it's sad. -It's historic. Come on, this is where your book shouId start. -I didn't reaIize you were here, mate. -Hi, Tony. How are you doing? This is Ian's gran. -Tony WiIson. -Thanks for aII you did. I've seen you on the teIIy. You aIways Iook so smart. Let's go and get a cuppa tea, shaII we? That is the musicaI equivaIent of Che Guevara. I'm gonna go. I just don't feeI, you know.... I'II speak to you. Take it aII in. Bye, son. Don't beat about the bush. I'II ask you a question, and I want a straight answer. AII right? Give me the dignity of that. Are you Ieaving me? Yes. Bad energy around here now. What does that mean, ''bad energy''? What the fuck does that.... Energy? You don't know what energy is. -That is Iate 20th century hokum... -Don't say another word. ...masquerading as spirituaIity. Don't touch me. -That is the Iast time you wiII ever touch me. -AII right. AII right, that is the Iast time you'II ever touch me. I'm asking you reaIIy niceIy... ...pIease... ...don't Ieave me. Just fuck off, go, don't.... Don't. Don't Ieave me. Right. Okay. Thank you. Fuck off. This is a low point for me, obviously. But... ...I think it was Scott FitzgeraId who said: ''American Iives don't have second acts.'' This is Manchester. We do things differentIy here. This is the second act. ''Two IittIe dicky birds sitting on a waII... ''...one caIIed Peter and one caIIed PauI.'' Just Iike you, Looby Lou. Turkey-Iurkey. Goosey-Ioosey. Henny-penny. Do you know what I mean? No. The history of popuIar music is Iike a doubIe heIix. That's two waves that intertwine. When one wave goes Iike this, the other one goes Iike that. You've got two... ...waves doing that. One Iike that, and one Iike that. When one musicaI movement is in the descendant, another one is in the ascendant. Right now, we're in a kind of a crisscross, a kind of hiatus. But the two guys that are gonna be on the crest of the next wave... ...are PauI and Shaun Ryder. This is a true incident... ...a bit Iike the hang-gIiding, which works on two IeveIs. This takes pIace in 1980, when Shaun and PauI... ...put rat poison into some bread and fed it to 3,000 pigeons. Rick RastardIy, wing ding, forever and ever, amen. There you go. Catch it! It's down! ObviousIy, it's a reconstruction. No pigeons were harmed in the making of this fiIm. AIthough there are those that say they're pests. Rats with wings. Take that! Fac 51, a.k.a. the Hacienda. BuiIdings create synergy. They're a focus for creativity. When the Victorians buiIt the raiIways, they didn't just put up Portakabins... -...they went to town. -Jesus Christ. Just Iisten to the reverberation. It's IoveIy, isn't it? The sound of my voice. BuiIdings change the way peopIe think. That happened in Renaissance FIorence. But this isn't Renaissance FIorence. This is Dark Ages Manchester. It's Iike a fucking abattoir. Tickets for tonight. Right. What fucking good are they now? I'm sorry they're a bit Iate, but... ...thought we might use them as a souvenir. That's aII right. It's okay, it doesn't matter. This is gonna be the number-one invitation. They didn't hand out tickets for the Sermon on the Mount. PeopIe just turned up. They knew it was a good gig. How much has come out, in totaI, from our music budget? Pou700,000. Goodbye. We obviousIy have nothing in common. I'm a genius, you're fucking wankers. You'II never see me again. You don't deserve to see me again. -It's nice, though, innit? -Fantastic, mate. May 21, 1982. The night the Hacienda opened. Everyone wanted to play. Bowie, Queen, The Stones. i chose A Certain Ratio, because they were my band. And that was the point of the Hacienda. it was a place for people we knew, people we could trust. I can't beIieve this. They have totaIIy betrayed us here. What a fucking joke. I don't know, Rob. You know, it might work. Has there been a Wythenshawe Jazz Band? There hasn't, thank fucking God. Let me teII you, right, jazz is the Iast refuge of the untaIented. Jazz musicians enjoy themseIves far more than anyone Iistening to them. It's Iike theatre. It's what you do when you can't get a gig. It's one down from Celebrity Squares. ExceIIent, weII done. Very good. Where is everyone? We had 100 on the guest Iist. You were at the Sex PistoIs' gig. How many peopIe were there? -It was about 40. -Right, and it was history. But there's onIy 30 here tonight. ExactIy. The smaIIer the attendance, the bigger the history. There were 12 peopIe at the Last Supper. HaIf a dozen at Kitty Hawk. Archimedes was on his own in the bath. Pick on someone your own size. Or maybe not. We're here at Chester Zoo... ...to see a bath-time version of David and GoIiath. It's a bit of a mammoth task for... ...a young chap Iike yourseIf. -This isn't your normaI job, is it? -No, I'm an entertainer. Right, okay. And I saw there's a IittIe baby over.... Watch yourseIf there. There's a baby eIephant.... HeIIo, how do you do? There's peopIe Iike that I work with at Granada. Except that he's a IittIe bit more attractive. This morning, I was doing a feature... ...on an eIephant being washed by a midget. It was a dwarf. -That doesn't matter. -It matters to him. Look, I'm a serious journaIist. I've got a degree. Get me a proper gig, or Iet's forget we ever met. Tony, Iisten. ''Shy shy, hush hush, eye to eye.'' What do you reckon? Very good. I'II make you a big star. Sign you up tomorrow. -Catch you Iater. -Right. Don't caII me. You know your probIem? You take yourseIf too seriousIy. I do. I take myseIf very fucking seriousIy. What about a feature on the Northwest's taIIest man? Fuck off. No band ever survives the death of their lead singer. So, when Joy Division became New Order... ...no one expected them to succeed. As you've no visuaI imagination, I've done you a mock-up. -It's Iike a fIoppy disk. -FIoppy disk. It's fucking briIIiant. -It's pure, it's workmanIike, it's poetic. -It's expensive. Four-coIor printing. Cut out and gatefoId. It's fucking beautifuI. I never count the cost of beauty, you shouId know that. Can I taIk to you about these sIeeves? Sure. Have you costed it? Because I have. We Iose five pence on every singIe one of these records that we seII. We're gonna seII fuck-aII, so it doesn't matter. BIue Monday became the biggest selling 12-inch single ever... ...which made loads of money for New Order. Not that they saw any of it. Because every penny they earned... ...was swallowed up by the debts of the Hacienda. Thank you. Bravo. Vini.... What do you want? I'II have a coke, pIease. Thank you. A coke and a gin and tonic, pIease. -How was that? -It was great. It was wonderfuI. Great, it was just... ...I Iove it. Tuesday night. We need to have a rethink of our strategy. You know, whatever we achieve, the important thing to remember is that... ...you make wonderfuI music. Great. Can you spare 20 pence, mate, pIease, for a cuppa tea? -There you go, keep that. -Ta, mate. I'm Boethius, author of The Consolation of Philosophy. It's my beIief that history is a wheeI. '''Inconstancy is my very essence,' says the wheeI. '''Rise up on my spokes if you Iike... '''...but don't compIain when you're cast back down into the depths. '''Good times pass away, but then so do the bad. '''MutabiIity is our tragedy, but it's aIso our hope. '''The worst of times, Iike the best... '''...are aIways passing away.''' I know. There were severaI sightings, Iast night, of an unidentified fIying object... ...over the LittIe HaIton district of Manchester. ApparentIy the aIiens fIew Iow over the district... ...and then disappeared, which is kind of understandabIe. If you're Iistening, spacemen, next time you might wanna try MarpIe instead. Just don't Iand on my house. Good night. Fucking heII! Every great band needs its own special chemistry... ...and Bez was a great chemist. Can I offer anybody, Iike, the best drug experience they've ever had? His favorite chemical was ecstasy. Stop! Shut the fuck up! i first saw them at the Battle of the Bands at the Hacienda. They came last, but i signed them anyway. -I'm getting in the front. -You're not. Get the gear in the back first. It's dance music, and it's rock music. It's got a kind of.... It's got that indie guitar sound... ...and it's got the kind of whacka-whacka, wah-wah thing. It's souIfuI and it's rocky. It's got the rawness of rock and this sort of souIfuI feeI to it. Give him an exampIe of some of your Iyrics. Go on, anything. ''Good, good, good. Good, good, doubIe good.'' That is fucking horribIe. Shaun's Iyrics, on a good day, are on par with... ...W.B. Yeats on an average day. I've got some sweet-and-sour over there you can have. -ShaII we do a song, then? -Let's do it, man. Come on, Horse. -Right now? -Now? We've got to go. Come on, Bez coming in? -Stay here. What's the point? -Why not? He adds to the fucking vibe. He's not in the fucking band, is he? ''You don't want that face, because the bones stick out'' I think it's top. -Sort of out of tune, isn't it? -Something's not right. ''My freaky dancing is cooIing your thing'' Can you stop? What are you stopping for? Somebody's out of tune. Can you check your tuning? Who's out of tune? -Fucking not me. -Barney's out of tune. -Mark, can you give me an E? -Yeah. Bez is your man, mate. He'II sort you out. He wants an E. That'II tune you in, Barney. That'II take you right in, mate. On the stage, Bez. Come on. What are you fucking doing? -To me, that is dance music. -No one's dancing. Come on, man. -What the fuck are you doing, man? -PIay your banjo, man. This is Bez. Four thousand years ago, the Egyptians buiIt the very first canaI. The first canaI in Britain was buiIt by the Romans. The Fossdyke in LincoIn. This is the RochdaIe CanaI, buiIt in 1804... ...when Manchester was the worId's greatest industriaI city. Their negIect mirrors the decIine... ...of post-war IndustriaI Britain. Suddenly, everything came together. The music, the dancing, the drugs, the venue, the city. i was proved right. Manchester was like Renaissance Florence. Mike Pickering was right. You don't need bands in a club. Shaun Ryder was right. New Order were right. We all came together. Everyone came to the Hacienda. it was our cathedral. Manchester, birthplace to the railways... ...the computer... ...the bouncing bomb. And tonight, something equaIIy as epoch-making is taking pIace. See? They're appIauding the DJ. Not the music, not the musician, not the creator... ...but the medium. This is it... ...the birth of rave cuIture. The beatification of the beat. The dance age. This is the moment when even the White man starts dancing. WeIcome to Manchester. I have with me a very speciaI new friend of mine... ...Mr. Peter Duff... ...who worked on the canaIs, not just in this century, but in the Iast one. Peter. The canaIs, how many years ago.... What year was it that you started working on the canaIs? On the cusp of a new age. What do you remember about the canaIs in those days? Very IittIe. -Very IittIe. -PeacefuI. -PeacefuI? -Yes. I don't think we're gonna be abIe to use much of that. Do you want.... I mean, the chap's bareIy standing. -Hi, Tony. -Hi. -Tony, how's it going? -Great. WonderfuI. Thought we'd get the kids-- -This'II be in the Mondays' video? -This is gonna be it. -But that's Brian and MichaeI. -I know, but the singIe's not finished. It was supposed to be done two weeks ago. You know what he's Iike. He's aIways a bit sIow. -Why? Who's producing this? -Martin Hannett. For fuck's sake. Did you not know? No, I didn't know. -Anyway, must crack on. -These are great. The kids are great. HeIIo. The last time i'd seen Martin was five years earlier. The Hacienda was costing New Order $10,000 a month... ...and none of us had a clue what to do. You know broccoIi? BroccoIi, the vegetabIe? Yeah. That was invented by Cubby BroccoIi, the producer of the James Bond fiIms. LittIe-known fact. It's true. It's a crossbred vegetabIe. It's haIf cauIifIower, haIf-- -What? -HaIf something. A green. It's haIf a green thing that I don't know. HaIf a cauIifIower. And the BroccoIi.... Cubby BroccoIi's famiIy.... Was inventing vegetabIes before they started making movies? -That's what bankroIIed the Bond fiIms. -I don't beIieve you. -That is a fact. -I don't beIieve you. It's fact. Look it up in EncycIopedia Britannica. -Where am I gonna Iook that up? -It's absoIute fact, that. Thanks, Martin. -i'm still waiting. -So are we. Hi, guys. Where is the Mad Professor? Fucking crying in there. We need to get him a teat. We can't get fuck-aII done. -i'm still waiting... -He's fucking enormous. ...and it's very fucking boring. -He's a mess. -He's been Iike this aII day. i'm gonna stick Bez's maracas up my fucking jacksie. He's back in his cIoset. HeIIo, Hannett, you wanker. Hello, Wilson, wanker. I'm trying to get these shower of cunts that masquerade as a band... ...to pIay some fucking music, which seems to be the greatest... ...and most difficuIt thing I've ever had to do in my fucking Iife. -Take it down, Mart. -Sorry, come on. He's caImed down a Iot since I Iast worked with him. -Martin-- -Fuck off! You can't threaten me any more. You're a big man, but you're out of shape. AIthough you couId sit on me. I've got something for you. There you go, mate. Can you turn that porn off? We've got a Iady on the bus. Leave it on. I think I'm in this one. Go on, Roe. PuII those curtains to. What's up with you? What are you Iooking at me Iike that for? I'm not Iooking at you. -You are. -I was Iooking at Bez. You are Iooking at me. What's up with you? Are you jeaIous? JeaIous of what? I'm not jeaIous. If I wanted you, I couId have you right now. I'm not jeaIous of nobody. Tony. Sir Anthony, sir. Can I interest you in some CharIeston, sir? No, I think cocaine's a suits' drug. It's a destroyer of taIent. We haven't got any fucking taIent. Roe, chop him one out. That's why it's fine for you to use it. -You're a very giving person, sir. -Go on, Tone. One of us! Never judge a book by its cover, that's what I say. And you've got a very nice cover, by the way. -A first edition. Very coIIectibIe. -Thank you. -Hi, Tony. -HeIIo, Iove. This is Yvette. She's actually Miss United Kingdom. But that's not what attracted me to her. That's where they do Stars in Their Eyes, interiors of Coronation Street. HeIIo, Iove. You aII right? -It's nice to see you again. -And you, as ever. -And what do you do? -How do you mean? You know, your job. Here. I'm Tony WiIson. -It's a bit chiIIy. -Pop this. Have this. -Put that on. -Thank you. You can keep it. It's cashmere. -Are you sure? -Of course. -Thank you. -Least I can do for Miss UK. I haven't got a tiara, so that'II have to do. I mean, Granada reaIIy is just sort of my hobby. My proper job.... -Do you know the Happy Mondays? -I Iove them. -I Iook after them. Factory Records. -ReaIIy? -That's my IabeI. New Order? -Yeah. Heard of them? There you go. -Do you know the Hacienda? -It's fantastic. -I own that nightcIub. Part owner. -ReaIIy? If you ever want reduced admission, see me. Better stiII, you get in free if you escort me. I'm fIirting, by the way. -You are. -It's that obvious? Don't judge. Piety's a very unattractive quaIity. FIirting is a very naturaI process, she's aware of it... ...I'm being post-modern before it was fashionabIe. Being at the Hacienda was like being at the French Revolution. ''Bliss it was, that dawn, to be alive ''But to be young was very heaven'' Okay, so i was nearly 40, which isn't really young. But these days it isn't that old, either. And Yvette said the age difference didn't bother her. Story of my Iife. And by the way, we're still together. So, whatever you're thinking, you're wrong. Do you know, I think that Shaun Ryder is... ...on par with W.B. Yeats, as a poet. -ReaIIy? -AbsoIuteIy. TotaIIy. That's amazing, since everyone eIse thinks he's an idiot. Shaun, where the fuck are you, son? We can't do anything without the singer. Listen, one of you fuckers is gonna have to do it. Get busy, man. I'II sing. Horse, man. Step in, mate. You'll have to do it. AII right, I'II do it. Factory believes in artistic freedom. And Shaun is an artist, but he's also an addict. So i knew, even then, that choosing Nathan... ...as the new manager of the Mondays was not necessarily a good idea. -Nathan's gonna be our new manager. -I'm gonna Iook after them. He does it very weII. But i wanted Shaun to be happy, so i indulged him. What are you doing? My God, you're not that out of it, are you? I'm not a Iump of hash. I'm in charge of Factory Records. I think. They're living legends. Here we go. It's an adventure. It's the Magical Mystery Tour. It's the Merry Pranksters. -It's Iike Scooby Doo because they had a bus. -It is a IittIe bit Iike Scooby Doo. Manchester became the center of the universe. The best drugs, the best clothes... ...the best women, the best music... ...the best bands, the best club. Suddenly, everyone wanted to be from Manchester. And if you were a Manc, everyone wanted a part of you. -Tone. -Yes? -Coming back for a wabosh, mate? Come on. -I've eaten, thanks. -You're Iooking very beautifuI. -He owns the Hacienda. -I'm the big guy. -He's the big one. He's the big boss. MetaphoricaIIy speaking. it was like being on a fantastic fairground ride... ...centrifugal forces throwing us wider and wider. And there's this brilliant machine at the center... ...that's gonna bring us back to earth. That was Manchester. That was the Hacienda. Now imagine the machine breaks. For a while it's better, because you're really flying... ...but then you're fucked, because nobody beats gravity. I'm back. What are you doing here? I thought you were in gIamorous fucking London. I went to interview Sir Keith Joseph. It's very important. He Iikes to be caIIed Sir Keith. His knighthood's very important to him. They caII him the Mad Monk. That's important at the end of the story. i was supposed to get the train, right? But i didn't, i drove. i'm driving along, really well... ...and i end up on this fucking Pennine. There you go. A mobiIe phone. Do you know how it works? Yeah. I've used them before. And i make a phone call on this mobile phone thing. it's like listening to a fucking headache. And then I was waIking aIong a raiIway Iine... ...and a train goes roaring past. And i climbed onto the train. You can't come in here, son. I'm sorry, do you know who I am? Ernie, we've got one here doesn't know who he is. Timing is everything. When we built the Hacienda, it was too soon. When we built the Factory office, it was too late. it did, however, have a zinc roof, which was very cool. Even though you could only see it if you were in a helicopter. At Iast, Factory has... ...a proper office. It's made of MDF. What are aII these about? How much was it? It's not the materiaI, Hooky. You're paying for design. I didn't ask about the materiaI. I asked how much it was. -It was Pou30,000. But-- -Did you pick the shape? -It was what? -No, the shape is something that.... -Pou30,000? -The point is, if you go to any London-- For a fucking tabIe? If you go to any London record company.... Are you out of your mind, you dozy prick? ShaII we Iet go of him, and shaII we not fucking do that? -You aII right? -Yeah, fine. -No, it's aII right. -Are you okay? -I'm absoIuteIy fine. -Okay. -Rob, sit down. -I'm aII right, honestIy. Pou30,000 for a fucking tabIe, you cunt! WiII you stop? For God's sake. There was only one problem with the Hacienda. it never made any money. There were huge crowds and a great atmosphere. But it was all fueled by ecstasy, not alcohol. And we didn't sell E at the bar. Although we did talk about it. We were spending money on the building, the staff, the DJs, the sound system... ...but most of the money went to the drug dealers. And guess what? They didn't give the money to us. They spent it on clothes or cars or restaurants or houses... ...or girls or guns. Especially guns. AII right, man? Drug dealers are like any other businessmen. They like to increase their market share. You IittIe fucking pricks, teII your mum I give you this. Only, suppliers don't tend to undercut each other on prices... ...just try to get rid of the competition. Soon, the violence spread to the Hacienda. -Hi, big feIIa. -What can I do for you? -Everybody pays, even gang members. -Give him a sIap, PeI. He shot him! This is bad in itself, but it's also bad for business. And when someone's carrying a gun, it's hard to turn them away. Pretty soon there's shootings inside the club as well as on the door. if you've got a lot of drugs and guns in your club... ...you're gonna get shut down. So, you have to try and control it. i took advice from Plutarch's Life of Caesar... ...where it says, ''Keep your friends close, but your enemies closer.'' The problem is often the solution in a different set of clothes. Come on in. in this case, we gave the drug dealers the doorman's uniform. Now we didn't control the door or the drugs. You as weII, Iove, come on. I'm sorry, it's not your scene tonight, mate. Come on. I pay your fucking wages, mate. -You're on a wind-up, aren't you? -Just fucking do one. According to William Blake: ''The road of excess leads to the palace of wisdom.'' i was on my way there, in a Jag. -HeIIo. -Hiya. HeIIo. Are you aII right, Iad? Kiss. There's some very unspectacuIar fIowers and grapes. Nice views. BeautifuI. TroIIs. I used to have TroIIs when I was IittIe. Do you stiII caII them TroIIs? Yeah. -I've got you a mobiIe phone. -Thanks. Mummy's got a phone, and I've got one, too. See? So, it's Iike tin cans with string. -Remember when we made tin cans with string? -Yeah. TaIked down the end of it? I've got to go to Martin Hannett's... ...funeraI. -Who? -Martin Hannett. Had a heart attack. Okay... ...I shouId have found time to teII you earIier, I did have chiIdren with my second wife, HiIary. And there was a time with Lindsay when that was aII I wanted. And, no, I've not been the best father in the worId. Yes, I couId have been there more than I have. And obviousIy I've got regrets about that, but this is not a fiIm about me. I am not Prince HamIet, nor was meant to be. I'm a minor character in my own story. This is a fiIm about the music... ...and the peopIe who made the music. Ian Curtis, Shaun Ryder... ...and Martin Hannett. Take your time, gentIemen, it's very heavy. This coffin's not going to go down, so we're going to Ieave it on top, okay? GentIemen, Ieave the straps, pIease. Thank you very much. Death puts things in perspective. We're all equal in the grave. Except Martin, obviously, who was a huge character. So huge, his coffin wouldn't fit in his grave. i remember thinking, ''Martin Hannett, too big for death.'' ''...the hope of resurrection... ''...in those whose bodies are subject to decay.'' We'd been running on empty for months. We shuffled cash from the club to the record company... ...and back again. -How are you doing? -Good. -What can I get you? -I'm right, thanks. You know, we do have to restock the bar occasionaIIy. You might wanna pass that on... ...to the guys. We're thinking of having a temperance night. That's IoveIy. And I'II see you next week, then. We had to make some money. So we had to release records. New Order want to record another aIbum. Thank Christ for that. In Ibiza. -Why Ibiza? -Why not Ibiza? It's gonna be monsoon season when we get there. -It's sunny, actuaIIy. -Not aII the time. New Order went off to ibiza, and took two fucking years to make the album. -The Mondays want to make another aIbum. -That's fantastic news. And the great thing is, we can do it in Manchester. You know Shaun's had a bit of troubIe with... ...heroin recentIy? Yeah. I tried to get him off smack and on to methadone, but now he's doing both. Both barreIs. So, I've been reading about this pIace where there isn't any. It's an isIand. WouIdn't be the IsIe of Man, wouId it? No. Barbados. Look, they're aII mine, they're aII in my name. It's my bag, it's mine, it's my methadone. I need it, I'm a sick man. Nathan had supplied enough methadone to keep Shaun going for four weeks. That's how long they were supposed to stay in Barbados. You fucking wankers! Sorry, man. It's fucking coming out of your wages! it was just bad luck that the methadone didn't even make it onto the plane. -Hey, just snort it, man. -Nathan! There was no heroin on the island. But there was plenty of crack. Every week, we sent over all the cash we had to pay for the studio... ...and Nathan used it for drugs instead. When the cash ran out, they stole the recording gear... ...then they stole the furniture... ...and then they sold their clothes. i was stranded on a desert island... ...with no shelter nor companionship. Every day i kept watch for rescue, but no one came. My only distraction was to write lyrics for my forthcoming album. But then i thought: ''Why the fuck should i?'' Very good. So, Nathan, the tape, the music, where is it? -Shaun's kidnapped it. -Come again? Shaun's kidnapped the tape. What are you doing? It's nothing-- We spent Pou200,000 on that recording. At Ieast. That was before mixing it. -And now Shaun wants you to buy it off us. -You cheeky.... Wait. Don't, Rob, he's a fucking kid. -Let's caIm down. How do we buy it? -He wants you to meet him tomorrow. Dry Bar, 10:00. -This is your fauIt for Ietting them go out there. -Why is it my fauIt? -But what if he asks for, Iike, Pou100,000? -If he says Pou100,000, he won't back down. If we mention a figure, we'II be aII right. He just wants a gesture. -Hi, Tone, how are you? AII right? -Yeah, how are you doing? Jesus Christ, what the fuck are you doing? -What are you doing? -Fuck's sake! Shit! Fuck. You ought to be carefuI with that, Shaun. You couId take someone's eye out. Have you got a new toy, mate? Are you man enough for that? -It's great to see you. -You, too. It's great to see you, despite that incident. Right. I've got.... I'm gonna make you an offer. GIad you came. The sum totaI in my waIIet... ...is, if I'm not mistaken... ...40, that's 50 quid. That's aII I've got. Thanks, Tone. There you go. -Master tapes and DATs. -Thanks very much. -PIeasure doing business with you. -Put that away! -Seven years bad Iuck, that. -I know. Come on. Fucking get out of here. Don't taIk to any strange men. Twats. Fucking Tony WiIson. Martin Hannett revisited. Pou50. You wouIdn't get that in the January saIes. I have in my hand a DAT... ...which my beautifuI assistant Yvette wiII put on. -The Mondays. It's here. -Hope it was fucking worth it. A totaI fucking nightmare. Thank you, Barney. At Ieast there's something on the fucking thing, anyway. So far, so-so. It's good. It's got a good groove. When are the vocaIs gonna kick in on it? Next break. -There's no fucking vocaIs on it, is there? -ApparentIy not. Does that mean you'II have to go back into the studio? -No. -We're not going back in the studio. We've got no money. And we can't get any credit, and we are sheIIing out... ...bucket Ioads, thousands, on this stupid office. We have to... ...reIease a record. New Order, with respect, have done fuck-aII, so we have to finish the Mondays. We just need someone... -...to pay for the studio, distribute the record-- -Who? -Then we'II share in the profits. -Who? -Lots, it's the Mondays. Lots of peopIe. -Who? -Who's gonna pay for that? -A number of peopIe. PrincipaIIy, London Records. -Fucking-- -What's wrong with London Records? -The name, for a start. -It's just a fucking name. -You've dropped a boIIock, haven't you? -I've dropped a boIIock. You've dropped one massive boIIock. I've dropped a big, fucking massive, hairy boIIock. WheeI of Fortune. With Anthony Wilson... ...and Teri Seymour. WeIcome to the Wheel of Fortune. There it is, the wheeI that, throughout the centuries... ...has been used as a symboI for the vicissitudes of Iife. Boethius himseIf, in his great work, The Consolation of Philosophy... ...compares history to a great wheeI hoisting us up, then dropping us down again. '''Inconsistency is my very essence,' says the wheeI. '''Raise yourseIf up on my spokes if you wish... '''...but don't compIain when you're pIunged back down.''' Let's spin the wheel. What a Ioad of buIIshit. We'II remove that in editing. Just go straight from ''WheeI of Fortune,'' cut to ''Spin the wheeI.'' The guy over there, pIaying the director, that's the reaI Tony WiIson. Okay? There's pIenty of other reaI peopIe in the fiIm. There's PauI Ryder. -How are you doing? -Good. -Mark E. Smith from The Fall. -What are you doing, opening this cIub? -Mani from The Stone Roses. -Right, where's Shaun? -InspiraI Carpets' CIint Boon. -There's one with a tabIe there. Mike Pickering. Dave Haslam. And Vini Reilly. Although, this scene didn't actually make it to the final cut. I'm sure it'II be on the DVD. I'm in security now, Tone, and repossession. That's where the money is. -You stiII keeping the cIub going, are you? -Yeah, got to. Boys. Hi, Tony. Have a Iisten to this. It's an oId Joy Division song with a souI sIant. I know what it is. I've got a big repossession number next week. Next Tuesday. Massive. Whitworth Street. Hacienda. I'm saying fuck-aII. Can you teII them I've had enough? Thanks, great! WeII done, Iads. Fantastic. I'II caII you. -What's the crack with this spread, Tony? -This is sophisticated food for Londoners. It's fucking Ieaves, man. You've given us fucking Ieaves. It's stuffed vine Ieaves. You shouId try them. Broaden your horizons. It's fucking southern food for southern cunts. -HeIIo, Roger. Is it Roger? -How are you doing? -Very pIeased to meet you. -Tony. -This is Terry, yeah. -Nice to meet you, Terry. -Can I just see the band? -These are the guys. Roger Ames. London Records. -How are you doing? Okay? -That's Roger. What you've done is briIIiant, and if you don't mind me saying... ...what a tabIe. And there's food on it, too, heIp yourseIves. I wouIdn't eat it if I were you. It's rabbit food, man. We Iike shagging Iike them, but we don't want to fucking eat Iike them. If music be the food of deaIs, why don't we eat that? AbsoIuteIy. Yvette? Do you wanna do the honors? Terry, have you met Tony? -We said ''heIIo.'' -Fine. What's the tune caIIed? -Nice to meet you. -And you, Iad. We're gonna do a cover of Silence is Golden. -Turn it up. -This is briIIiant. -Turn it up. -I Iike that. -PIay some more. -I was reaIIy into that. -Let's hear some Iyrics. -Very funny. You'II hear the vocaIs when we hear the offer. -That's the way we do things here. -Where are you going? I'm not eating fucking bunny-rabbit food. I'm going for a Kentucky. -Are you coming? -We'II get you a Kentucky. -See you Iater, Tone. -AII right, mate, see you Iater. Yvette, do you wanna go and just keep an eye on them? Why don't we Iisten to the tune whiIe they're out? Come on. I do understand that Shaun can be... ...a IittIe bit of a handfuI. He's a genius, though. You're right, he is a genius. And, I've got to say, if I owned a record IabeI... ...and I'd sign Shaun to it... ...then I wouId not be seIIing him on for a fee. I'm gonna make you an offer. Can I Iean on this? Yes, you've gotta be a bit.... It's fine. I'm gonna make you an offer for the whoIe company. Okay. Pou5,000,000. What do you want for that? What do I want? I want everything. I want everything. I want the back cataIogue. I want this tabIe, this food, these windows. -I want it aII. -You want Factory? Quite right. Okay, right, we're very fIattered... ...terribIy fIattered that you think we're worth such a princeIy sum. However, what I have to expIain to you is that... ...Factory Records are not actuaIIy a company. We are an experiment in human nature. You're Iaboring under the misapprehension... ...that we actuaIIy have... ...a deaI... ...with our bands, that we have any kind of a contract at aII... ...and I'm afraid we don't. Because that's the sum totaI of the paperwork... ...to do with Factory Records' deaI with their various bands. ''The artists own aII their own work. The IabeI owns nothing. ''Our bands have the freedom....'' ''To fuck off.'' Quite right. ''...the freedom to fuck off.'' -I don't have to deaI with you at aII. -Correct. But my epitaph wiII be... ...that I... ...never, IiteraIIy nor metaphoricaIIy... ...soId out. I protected myseIf from ever having to have... ...the diIemma of having to seII out... ...by having nothing to seII out. You're fucking mad. That's a point of view. Most of all, i love Manchester. The crumbling warehouses, the railway arches... ...the cheap, abundant drugs. That's what did it in the end. Not the money, not the music, not even the guns. That is my heroic flaw... ...my excess of civic pride. Ryan. Tony WiIson, is it true the Hacienda is cIosing down? Yes, it is. How does it feeI now that it's fucked up in your face? GIorious. The Hacienda is dead. It wiII never grow oId. -UnIike your good seIf. -I feeI Iike a big dandeIion cock.... -What? -CIock. Cock or cIock. It doesn't matter. Whose seed is catching the wind, is gonna fIy off, Iand, take root and spawn... ...dozens, thousands of IittIe baby dandeIions. Like the biggest ever fuck. And now she wants one, so I've gotta go. I've got the horn, Ryan. Tony, how are you doing? Vini, go on in. Let him in. You couIdn't just give us 10 minutes, couId you? -Fucking heII. I'm fuII of fIu. -Just 10. Ladies and gentlemen... ...the hour is upon us. i'd like now to ask you to leave... ...in a disorderly fashion. Before you do... ...i want you to invade the offices... ...which are over there in the corner... ...through that door, and as far as you can... ...loot them. Office equipment, computers, musical equipment... ...take it all, use it wisely. Let a thousand Mancunians bloom. Good night, God bless. Morning. AII right, Tone, how are you doing, mate? Very good. I'm reaIIy sorry about what happened. Don't worry about it, mate. It's just, you know.... This is fucking great. This is briIIiant stuff. Shaun brought it back from Barbados. WeII done, Shaun. -Don't mention it. -So, it wasn't a compIete waste of time, then? I had a great time, what I can remember. Tony. You did a good job. Basically, you were right. Shaun is the greatest poet since Yeats. This is amazing. Can I have it in writing? it is already written in the sinews of history and the hearts of men. it's a pity you didn't sign The Smiths, but you were right about Mick Hucknall. His music's rubbish, and he's a ginger. Vini Reilly, by the way... ...is way overdue a revival. You might think about a greatest hits. It's a good idea. it's good music to chill out to. -You're right. -i usually am. Are you aII right there, Tony? Yeah, I've just seen God. -You did what? -I've just seen God. -Did you? -Yeah. What did he Iook Iike? He Iooked Iike me. How do you mean? He was the doubIe of me. It's written in the BibIe, isn't it? God made man in his own image. But not a specific man. No, but... ...if you'd have spoken to him, he wouId have Iooked Iike you. But you didn't. I did. And he Iooked Iike me. It's fucking top gear, man.

 3 ) 24hourpartypeople- for fans only的電影

24hourpartypeople—(這也是Happy Mondays一首歌名)

英國重要獨立廠牌Factory老闆Tony Wilson的傳記電影
仿紀錄片的拍攝手法
感覺上不像在看電影
像在重建回憶
我們和Tony Wilson一起在建構歷史..

英國著名的喜劇演員Steve Coogan飾演Tony Wilson
(他也在成龍演的環遊世界80天裡軋了一角)
本片完全由Tony這個角色敘述Factory/Hacienda興衰
劍橋畢業的他一開始是在Granada TV擔任主持人
在punk還屬地下時
他就已公開在自己的電視節目裡介紹Sex Pistols.
接下來更創立了Factory Records 和Hacienda Nightclub
而這兩個廠牌和俱樂部的故事也就是本電影的重心

不知是Tony本人就這麼幽默還是劇本寫的好
或者是Steve Coogan表現出色
本片處處充滿一種先知的幽默

看著Joy Division的出現
Ian Curtis的自殺
Factory唱片的成立
New Order的轉型成功
Happy Mondays的引領潮流....
我們這些fans也參與了這部份的歷史呢
很感動…

有朋友說這似乎是一部For Fans Only的電影
他們看不到一半就看不下去因為不是Joy Division的fans

也有有趣的部份..
片子開頭
16歲的Mick Hucknall (Simply Red主唱)
也參加了1976年Sex pistol出道的那場歷史性表演
(我看到時嚇了一跳,以為自己看錯呢)
也許那場演唱會也影響了他吧..
但他卻組了"就是紅Simply Red"這樣的樂隊
Tony在片子快結束時看到長得像自己的上帝說
"沒錯,你是對的,Mick Hucknall的音樂爛透了"
…哈哈哈…太幽默了啦…
(這也顯示英國音樂圈還真大方,電影裡還直接講出來,
也不見Mick Hucknall去抗議)

我個人對他的白人靈魂美聲倒是有點好感喔
Stars真是超好聽的…

 4 ) 24小时狂欢的人

影片叙述的是从Joy Division到Happy Monday的曼彻斯特另类音乐简史,或者说,朋克发展到舞曲的历程。24 Hour Party People是Happy Monday的一首歌。歌曲本身比“快乐星期一”这种SB名字好不到哪儿去。

(一)
主角Tony Wilson是曼彻斯特著名的电视主持,著名到扒火车都可以不用补票。影片一开始是他做滑翔伞运动的镜头。他还播过新闻,做过关于运河的专题访问,采访过用鸭子放羊的人,甚至主持过幸运大转盘。显然这些东西都很乏味,所以他开始找场地,录制演出。这就找到了Joy Division——一支与Buzzcocks一样,受Sex Pistols现场的启发而成立的乐队。

Tony虽然算制作方之一,但是对制作一窍不通。他打算与录音天才Martin Hannett合作。找到Martin的时候,后者正站在一个小山包上,用话筒对着虚无的空气。

Tony喊:你在干嘛呢?Martin:我在录寂静。Tony惊道:录寂静?Martin把话筒转过来,说现在我在录Tony他妈的Wilson。

这就是他们相遇的经过。

Martin 身为天才,开出的也是天价:50磅一小时。他对JD的乐手很不满意,说吉他手“穿得像个音乐家,那就最好弹点他妈的音乐。”还把整套鼓从录音间搬到天台。但他对Joy Division独特的风格有着不可磨灭的贡献。没有他,我们听到的还会是2500000年前的老掉牙鼓点。Martin的死和他的生活一样富有戏剧性:因为他圆滚滚的身体肥得放不进墓穴,人们只好把棺材留在地上。

JD大获成功,主唱Ian却饱受癫痫折磨,最后在赴美巡演之前上吊身亡。

(二)



从那以后,曼城摇滚开始朝另一个方向发展。JD的其它三个成员组成了NewOrder,风格由"后朋克"转向“新浪潮”。Tony出资创办“工厂唱片” (Factory Records),不过不是一家公司,充其量算一个赔钱的投资方。“所有的乐队都拥有他们的音乐,以及随时滚蛋的自由”——Tony血书。这就是为什么他后来被 Happy Mondays的主唱耍得团团转,砸了两万镑却颗粒无收:Shaun拿这些钱统统买药嗑了。

“工厂”成立不久,Tony开了一家俱乐部取名“庄园”。在这里诞生了锐舞文化。人们不再崇拜音乐家或唱片公司,转而崇拜DJ。曼彻斯特突然成了人人向往的圣地,这里有最好的俱乐部,最好的舞曲和最好的药。Tony没有在俱乐部里卖药,所有的钱都流到了药贩子手上。“庄园”一分钱没赚,还要支付场地、设备和DJ等等的费用。药贩有钱之后就去买枪,于是暴力又蔓延到俱乐部里。不久“庄园”就倒闭啦。影片也到此结束了。

朋克在70年代发展到顶峰,代表乐队有英国的Sex Pistol、Buzzcocks,美国的Ramones等。这个音乐流派的出现是对以The Beatles为代表的嬉皮士的抗议,和对Black Sabbath、Led Zeppline为代表的经典摇滚的颠覆。歌曲内容在英国以政治性为主,在美国则努力取材于5、60年代的经典流行音乐(这个“流行”与我们今天所说的 Pop有本质上的区别,以后有时间我会另行撰文说明)。由于商业上巨大的失败,朋克很快转入低潮,直到涅磐成立才又回归。但是Kurt不久也死了。现在的朋克已经不知道是什么东西了。

“庄园”倒闭之后,Tony依然在电视台工作。赔钱也好赚钱也罢,他都是英国地下音乐史上一个不可或缺的人物,一个穿针引线的人物。他放弃商业利益培养乐队,完全是出于对音乐家的赏识(虽然他本人真的不懂音乐,眼光也是坏的时候比好的时候多)。他说话常常充满一种自嘲的口吻。和电影“Control”当中那个近乎小丑的喜剧角色相比,24HPP中的Tony Wilson更惹人喜爱。

最后,推荐所有的摇滚乐迷都来看这部影片:24小时派对狂(24 Hour Party People)

 5 ) 请称我为“环铁最范贝司手”

当年看完这部片子之后我染上了一个恶疾:只要我在小精灵的宿舍里呆着的时候,我就会操起我们可爱的汤人牛哥遗留下来的唯一一把贝司,连续弹奏“DIGITAL”和“SHE LOST CONTROL”的贝司旋律,直到隔壁宿舍的一群大壮好孩子集体前来围殴我。

JOY DIVISION时常让我想起某些只有一个大牌球星的球队,因为其他人的技术实在是太烂了,烂到我这样完全玩不明白任何乐器的人都可以熟练弹奏他们的贝司曲目,片子里一段情节貌似是录音室中真实发生的情景再现,录制时制作人实在无法忍受鼓手的糙活,让他先去屋顶上练好再回来录;IAN等人居然在驱车回家的路上发现他们走的时候落下了鼓手,此时这哥们还继续在寒冷的屋顶疯狂练习。我只能说我深受其勉励决定成为环铁附近技术含量最低但最有范儿的贝司手。

虽然IAN的扮演者是个小眼睛的家伙,但这并不妨碍他出色地痉挛再现当年的“乔伊师”(电影的这么翻译真让我别扭,但是乐队名称由来确实是这样——一支虐杀犹太人的党卫军部队名)的状况,也完全没有妨碍后来的NEW ORDER又热又潮~~至于片中的HAPPY MONDAY,我只记得他们是一群英国豁皮,在演出时总带着一个叫“贝斯”的托儿,此君专门负责在现场做各种豁皮动作活跃气氛,这些也完全不妨碍我不喜欢他们的音乐。

其他的情节我记不清晰了,倒霉的老板玩黄了自己的公司,这个行为倒是很摇滚,这个爆料一些当年乐队娱乐性的电影貌似很受好评,它在短时间激发出荷尔蒙分泌递减的老愤青们偶尔的小激情,现场和表演穿插的LO-FI范儿令人感到亲切,这也让我颠覆了第一次听“乔伊师”时的感受,我觉得他们都还是人,尤其是IAN,还活着。

完全没有技术的环铁最范儿贝司手给这部电影四星半的评价。哦也~~

 短评

都忘了是跟誰誰誰一起看的。只記得當時幾隻不斷嘟噥著,MD一定要去曼城朝聖啊。若干年後某隻真的去了。要我去跟他會合。我卻在巴黎搞不到簽證乾瞪眼著急。

6分钟前
  • 新竹
  • 推荐

梗实在太多,一切尽在不言默默喷激素中。。。。

7分钟前
  • 魁建国☘
  • 推荐

fooking hilarious.... the film writer n director fainally make tony a poor wanker...haha....哎不该对死人不敬。。连john lydon都这么尊敬tony wilson那我也跟着RIP一下。

12分钟前
  • FiΙTн
  • 还行

挺好看的,该片弘扬的观点就是:偶像他妈的也是人。剥离神性的IAN CURTIS比CONTROL里那个看一眼别人癫痫发作自己就犯病的傻逼可爱多了。。尤其自杀那段的处理。但是从IMDB上与其他同类型题材电影得分的差距可以看粗。。拍这类有关矫情群体精神偶像的片子还是不要太自以为是的好= =

14分钟前
  • k
  • 力荐

哈哈哈哈哈哈哈哈哈哈哈哈,happy monday怎么那么飞啊

19分钟前
  • lu_vvvv
  • 推荐

在家过万圣。本打算自high,结果只有Joy Division的个可以high一下。重新认识了这位邪邪的,聪明的,弥漫着吸血鬼和贵族气质的史蒂夫·库根,之前只看过他演的《情色大亨》。其实我是觉得他像我一个初中同学啦。

20分钟前
  • yes girl
  • 还行

纪录片的感觉,Manchester那时候真的是天堂啊,可是制造天堂的人们一个个都被弄的灰头土脸。。。

23分钟前
  • Enjoy🌈Rachel
  • 推荐

Joy Division, New Order, Happy Monday...Factory旗下的乐队们。。。manchester is an amazing plc希望原声有资源,选的乐队音乐还是很不错的P.S J.Simm萌晕了我。。。

26分钟前
  • 天行者爱grogu
  • 推荐

Fans Only

29分钟前
  • RIC
  • 推荐

没有字幕听英音真是自虐- -#....

31分钟前
  • choker
  • 推荐

最喜欢的厂牌factory的传记片,不过伊恩科特斯太不像了,比control里的差远了

33分钟前
  • 赵无乱
  • 推荐

曼彻斯特狂想曲,再往后面拍Oasis大概就要登场了吧;热衷社会研究的温特伯顿;不时加入的间离手法并没有什么亮点;“很显然这需要技术,没有一只鸽子在拍摄时死亡”;“无常是我们的悲剧,也是我们的希望”

36分钟前
  • 发不沾霓
  • 还行

此片含有性、毒品和摇滚。NB 。狂舞劲爆。音乐是唯一能让你死的东西。......我那见了鬼的英文水平。。买DVD去==

37分钟前
  • 爱茉绿绿
  • 推荐

一个爱曼市的我,边看边发现今天的这里还有不少处同片里的一样。更重要的是,Factory和那座传奇的Haçienda确实如Tony所预料,就算破产关门,也已经像蒲公英一样在把独立精神和对音乐的热意播撒到了这座城市的各个角落。所以看Factory的故事不仅觉得怀念,也会觉得亲切,会欣慰那些自己喜欢的、从Madchester的暴雨里走出来的音乐,早已被刻在雨城的基因里。关于影片本身:事件片段用得混乱,但是细节还原很下功夫(比如Ian Curtis死前做的事)。TW既是片中人又是解说人这个思路很巧,尤其是配上TW本人真实的主持人身份。总体来说太cult了点儿,如果不是乐迷可能看着挺晕的;本身对factory有些了解的话会觉得拍得挺特别的:)

39分钟前
  • 柠檬汽水
  • 推荐

音乐,毒品,滥交,狂躁……反正我没法理解这种生活。

42分钟前
  • Raaachael
  • 还行

曼彻斯特…Ian Curtis死后就没认真看了,joy division翻译成乔伊师,表示不解。不过比快乐小分队要好。

43分钟前
  • cosmic freeway
  • 还行

原来那些天才音乐人是这样的,那些经典专辑是这么做出来的……喜欢英伦摇滚的人看了一定会会心一笑,结尾很神奇且温馨。JOY DIVITION ROCKS! Love will tear us apart is greatest song ever!

48分钟前
  • 冰原狼白灵
  • 推荐

Tnoy对音乐的天真和执着另人感动,我尊敬他!他在Hacienda关闭时对Pub里所有人说的话几乎让我想拜一拜这个伟人。Tony说:“在你们离开之前,我要你们去看看办公室。就是在角落上……进门之后可以尽力拿东西。办公室的东西,电脑、音乐设备……都拿走……好好使用……培养出数千个曼彻斯特的音乐家”。

52分钟前
  • 海棠一生
  • 力荐

绵绵好萌哟喂!!!还有Jam的片段!!!

56分钟前
  • 金色面包机
  • 推荐

比control 好。虽然他死了,但我记得俱乐部最后一晚上他开心的样子。Ian Curtis 上吊的时候,电视里竟然播放着《史楚锡流浪记》。可能确实是一个会导致自杀的电影吧。

59分钟前
  • cassetteman
  • 还行