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IMDbPro

Rude Boy

  • 1980
  • Tous publics
  • 2h 13min
NOTE IMDb
6,4/10
1,8 k
MA NOTE
Mick Jones, Paul Simonon, and Joe Strummer in Rude Boy (1980)
DramaMusic

Un jeune punk britannique et machiniste itinérant pour The Clash traverse la vie dans l'Angleterre socialement déchirée des années 70.Un jeune punk britannique et machiniste itinérant pour The Clash traverse la vie dans l'Angleterre socialement déchirée des années 70.Un jeune punk britannique et machiniste itinérant pour The Clash traverse la vie dans l'Angleterre socialement déchirée des années 70.

  • Réalisation
    • Jack Hazan
    • David Mingay
  • Scénario
    • Ray Gange
    • David Mingay
  • Casting principal
    • Ray Gange
    • Joe Strummer
    • Mick Jones
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    6,4/10
    1,8 k
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • Jack Hazan
      • David Mingay
    • Scénario
      • Ray Gange
      • David Mingay
    • Casting principal
      • Ray Gange
      • Joe Strummer
      • Mick Jones
    • 24avis d'utilisateurs
    • 19avis des critiques
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
    • Récompenses
      • 1 victoire et 1 nomination au total

    Photos16

    Voir l'affiche
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    Rôles principaux58

    Modifier
    Ray Gange
    • Ray
    Joe Strummer
    Joe Strummer
    • The Group
    Mick Jones
    Mick Jones
    • The Group
    Paul Simonon
    Paul Simonon
    • The Group
    Topper Headon
    Topper Headon
    • The Group
    Jimmy Pursey
    • Guest Singer
    Johnny Green
    • The Roadies
    Barry Baker
    • Roadie
    Terry McQuade
    • Terry
    Caroline Coon
    • Clash Girlfriend
    Elizabeth Young
    • Ray's Girlfriend (I)
    Sarah Hall
    • Ray's Girlfriend (II)
    Barry Myers
    • Disc Jockey
    Colin Richards
    • Sex Shop Customer
    Lutz Becker
    • Sex Shop Customer
    Kenny Joseph
    • Solicitor's Clerk
    Lizard Brown
    • Suspect
    Hickey Etienne
    • Suspect
    • Réalisation
      • Jack Hazan
      • David Mingay
    • Scénario
      • Ray Gange
      • David Mingay
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs24

    6,41.7K
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    10

    Avis à la une

    7Koli

    Grittily realistic 'docu-drama'

    It is genuinely difficult to work out where the drama ends and the documentary takes over. When I sat down to watch it I had no idea whether Ray, the fan who becomes a roadie, was an actor or the genuine article. The stilted nature of some of the conversations, and self-conscious grins accompanying them, indicate contrivance, but it's as if real conversations are being reproduced for the camera. Only afterwards did I discover that Ray Gange was acting and had written the script.

    The film provides an insight into the world of punk rock in the late seventies. The Clash were more musically adept, and more politically aware, than most punk bands of the era, but the rebellious swaggers and the anger were typical enough. The concert footage is entertaining, and only marred by the fact that much is filmed from the back of the stage. It features much of the band's best material, from White Riot to Tommy Gun to London's Burning.

    This is a nostalgic treat for old punk rockers, and a useful introduction for those who, in the late 70s, were too young or allowed punk rock to pass them by.
    10Krustallos

    It's not exactly One plus One...

    ...despite copying the musicians in the studio trope, the porn-shop as symbol of capitalism and the black/white subplot. However "Rude Boy" perhaps deserves a little more attention than it seems to have received.

    As a 'proper movie' it's kind of a washout. Aiming for an improvised cinema-verite feel, it's hamstrung by a fatal lack of tension, having apparently been assembled by people with little grasp of editing, narrative or any kind of cinematic style. Despite this, the concert footage of The Clash is indispensable to anyone with an interest in the era, and shows why they were one of the all-time great rock and roll bands. We have very few 70's punk bands recorded properly on film as opposed to video and the difference in quality is striking. Also, Joe Strummer's death is still quite recent as I write and seeing him here in his prime is poignant in the extreme.

    In general there are very few film documents of punk. We have Jarman's "Jubilee" which was more of a neo-Elizabethan fantasia, "The Great Rock and Roll Swindle" with its McClarenite rewriting of history and come-lately nonsense like "Breaking Glass". "Rude Boy" at least doesn't fall into any narrative clichés (if only by barely having a plot) and by its very lack of creative flair may succeed best in giving a picture of the time. For example, unlike the myth-making of the likes of "Sid and Nancy", this shows punk gigs as they actually were - largely populated by lads with feather-cuts and tank tops.

    By concentrating on hanger-on Gange instead of the band itself, the filmmakers turn the story into one of the relationship between the band and its fan-base - pointed up by having Strummer sing "All The Young Punks" right through in the studio without the backing track to distract us from the lyric.

    The commentator who said this did not give a true picture of the politics of the time is surely wrong. I was there and it seems pretty accurate to me. We see the resurgent National Front, the Anti-Nazi League, the bullishness and racism of the police at the time (which would shortly lead to the Brixton riots) and the rise of Thatcherism out of the bankrupt Butskellite consensus. Ray Gange's character in the film seems intended to represent the British white working class at the time - confused, politically disengaged and borderline racist, the attitudes which led to the Thatcher victory we see at the end of the film. The left, variously represented by the SWP (bureaucratic) and Strummer (by turns tokenistic and diffident) fails to capture Gange's imagination and it is the right who seize on the desire for change and turn it to their own advantage.

    Rude Boy is a strange curate's egg, then. There may have been a really good film struggling to get out of this morass, but we'll never know. The special edition DVD has a "Just Play the Clash" function which lets you view only the concert footage and I suspect this will get a lot of use.

    Rating? 3/10 for the story, 10/10 for the music.
    7Quinoa1984

    Could've been better, but the concert footage is exquisite

    The Clash's Rude Boy is a misguided, exciting and overall decent attempt at capturing the band the Clash at the height of their crossover from punk pioneers (if there could legitimately be called such a thing) to full-blown rock stars in the UK. The story itself surrounding them is perhaps less great than the band itself, which might be expected considering all that can be done in integrating one character into a band through a fictional script. The movie examines an angry youth (Gange) who works in a sex shop, until he meets up with The Clash and becomes their roadie. The story of Gange (and his view of the situation in Britain at the time it was made, with the occasional communist remark or two depending on the perspective of the viewer) is a little confusing and muddled at times.

    Yet when the Clash take the stage, which is fairly often, the film is thriving and alive as any concert film in the history of rock movies. Maybe it may appeal more to punk fans from the 70's than the punk fans- or what bunch of posers that try and act hip from their Hot Topic gear- but it's hard not to pass it up as even a casual fan either. Performances include: I'm so Bored with the USA, White Riot, Janie Jones, White man in Hammersmith, and Police and Thieves, among others.
    ukcritic

    Abysmal

    One of the flattest movies I have ever seen. Mostly a collection of drab, long takes following around a young prick who joins The Clash as a roadie, does a bad job, then wanders around drunk, making tactless, muddled comments about race, the band's politics, and what he wants to do with his life. Dull, disjointed, quiet lines punctuate long silences; even the live performances of The Clash fail to give the movie much energy, due to poor sound design that cuts off absolutely all crowd noise and brings down the volume of the songs, so that most of them end up sounding like drab demo tapes.

    The film is mainly a plotless mess. When it does focus on the main character, all we see is a buffoon stuttering out inarticulate and unwelcome comments to roadies and band members who hate him but just try to ignore him. Whatever the character study of this guy hopes to achieve, it has absolutely nothing to do with The Clash, whose music and politics are not examined at all -- they are simply seen as some rock group the 'rude boy' is following around and who get some concert footage in the picture. In the last twenty minutes we also get meaningless cutaways to political party conferences and to a black youth who has not been in the movie before, has no connection to any of the previously seen characters, and who is undergoing criminal charges for something which is never made clear.

    Seeing this movie is tempting for Clash fans -- we want to see what the project is about, and we want to see the concert footage -- but it's an irrelevant, static mishmash that gives those in the audience a lot of time to scratch their heads.
    7Captain_Couth

    Interesting look at life in late 70's England.

    Rude Boy (1980) follows the life of a youth who dreams about working for his favorite band THE CLASH. The band THE CLASH co-star in this picture and some of their live performances is caught on film. This movie was made before they made it big across the pond. The band is shown working on their second album GIVE THE ENOUGH ROPE. A colleague of their's John Lydon once said that the Clash didn't know how to pace themselves, they would be tired after the first four or five songs. Well, he was right. Some of the concert footage shows, the band appeared to be sluggish and tired in some of their performances. I heard that the band wasn't happy with the way they were portrayed and neither was the young man who played the wannabe roadie. I found the band to be very interesting and I became a Joe Strummer fan after I saw this movie.

    The film-makers also capture the turmoil that was occurring on the streets of London during this time. Their was a lot of rioting and protesting. They also capture the collapse of the Labour Party and the rise of the Conservatives. Another one to seal in a time capsule. Interesting, recommended for Clash fans.

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    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      As an intro Before playing 'White Riot' as bouncers & the audience were fighting at the Glasgow Apollo Joe Strummer says "Simmer down ..Control your temper" . This is the first line from Bob Marley & the Wailers 1963 Jamaican hit single 'Simmer Down'
    • Gaffes
      When reporting the outcome of the trial, David Mellor is described as "David Mellor QC". Mellor was not made a Queen's Counsel until 1987.
    • Citations

      Lead guitarist: You know what I think, don't you? I've been watching you.

      Rude Boy: Yeah, I noticed. Quite a lot.

      Lead guitarist: I been watching you.

      Rude Boy: I'll keep it in mind.

      Lead guitarist: Do.

    • Versions alternatives
      Released at 133 minutes in Europe; US prints run 120 minutes.
    • Connexions
      Featured in White Riot (2019)
    • Bandes originales
      Police And Thieves
      Written by Junior Murvin and Lee 'Scratch' Perry

      Sung by Junior Murvin

      Island Records

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    FAQ15

    • How long is Rude Boy?Alimenté par Alexa

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 19 juin 1996 (France)
    • Pays d’origine
      • Royaume-Uni
    • Langue
      • Anglais
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • The Clash: Rude Boy
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Camberwell Road, Southwark, Londres, Angleterre, Royaume-Uni(procession of Royal cars passes along)
    • Sociétés de production
      • Buzzy Enterprises
      • Michael White Productions
      • National Film Trustee Company
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      2 heures 13 minutes
    • Couleur
      • Color
    • Mixage
      • Dolby
    • Rapport de forme
      • 1.78 : 1

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    Mick Jones, Paul Simonon, and Joe Strummer in Rude Boy (1980)
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