Rude Boy

Rude Boy

1980133 min
β˜…6.3/10
DramaMusicDocumentary

Plot Summary

Rude Boy is a semi-documentary, part character study, part 'rockumentary', featuring a British punk band, The Clash. The script includes the story of a fictional fan juxtposed with actual public events of the day, including political demonstrations and Clash concerts.

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🎬 Demo Trailer

πŸ“Ί Demo Trailer: This is a demo trailer. In production, replace with actual movie embed URLs from MixDrop, Doodstream, or other streaming services.

πŸ‘₯Cast (23)

Ray Gange

Ray Gange

Ray

Joe Strummer

Joe Strummer

The Group

Topper Headon

Topper Headon

The Group

Paul Simonon

Paul Simonon

The Group

Mick Jones

Mick Jones

The Group

Jimmy Pursey

Jimmy Pursey

Guest Singer

Caroline Coon

Caroline Coon

Clash Girlfriend

No Image

Johnny Green

Roadie

No Image

Barry Baker

Roadie

No Image

Terry McQuade

Terry

No Image

Elizabeth Young

Ray's Girlfriend #1

No Image

Sarah Hall

Ray's Girlfriend #2

🎬Crew

Director

Jack Hazan

Writers

Ray Gange, David Mingay

Producers

Jack Hazan, David Mingay

πŸ–ΌοΈGallery (3 images)

Rude Boy backdrop 1
Rude Boy backdrop 2
Rude Boy backdrop 3

🏷️Keywords

london, englandpunk rockroadiethe clash

πŸ’¬Reviews (1)

C

CinemaSerf

5/23/2024

If you are a fan of "The Clash" then you might get more from this fly-on-the-wall, partially dramatised, documentary that follows their ascendancy in the UK towards the end of the 1970s. To give it some sort of narrative, there's a fan inserted into the mix and he serves as a conduit to not just the story of the four piece's musical journey, but also to illustrate a Britain that was wallowing after many years of ineffective government, out of control trades unions, and on the cusp of electing Margaret Thatcher (who does feature now and again telling us about the safety of old ladies walking along the street). What's interesting about their conversations is that the band vacillate entertainingly from the banal gibberish of stoned, drunk, opinionated would-be rock stars to perfectly lucid men with astute views of society and the causes of the misery which many of us Brits experienced at the time. The drama doesn't really work so well, but when they are on stage the thing can be quite electric, and the bands engagement with a wide demographic delivering some potently observational lyrics; plenty of ripe and vivid language, and some poor soul sent to the hotel corridor so another could get laid in their shared room brings some humour to it too. It's far too long and indulgently paced though, and there's not enough music to really stop in from becoming a bit too repetitive. Needs a shortening to tighten up the story, but still interesting enough.

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