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IMDbPro

Urgh! A Music War

  • 1981
  • R
  • 1h 36m
IMDb RATING
7.9/10
919
YOUR RATING
Urgh! A Music War (1981)
DocumentaryMusic

Live performances from dozens of leading early-1980s musical acts - new wave, punk, ska, reggae - it's all here.Live performances from dozens of leading early-1980s musical acts - new wave, punk, ska, reggae - it's all here.Live performances from dozens of leading early-1980s musical acts - new wave, punk, ska, reggae - it's all here.

  • Director
    • Derek Burbidge
  • Stars
    • Wall of Voodoo
    • Stan Ridgway
    • Marc Moreland
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.9/10
    919
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Derek Burbidge
    • Stars
      • Wall of Voodoo
      • Stan Ridgway
      • Marc Moreland
    • 30User reviews
    • 15Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos10

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    Top cast99+

    Edit
    Wall of Voodoo
    • Themselves
    Stan Ridgway
    Stan Ridgway
    • Self - Wall of Voodoo
    Marc Moreland
    • Self - Wall of Voodoo
    Chas T. Gray
    • Self - Wall of Voodoo
    Bruce Moreland
    • Self - Wall of Voodoo
    Joe Nanini
    • Self - Wall of Voodoo
    Toyah Willcox
    Toyah Willcox
    • Self
    • (as Toyah Wilcox)
    Joel Bogen
    • Self - with Toyah Wilcox
    Pete Bush
    • Self - with Toyah Wilcox
    Charlie Francis
    • Self - with Toyah Wilcox
    Stephen Bray
    Stephen Bray
    • Self - with Toyah Wilcox
    • (as Steve Bray)
    John Cooper Clarke
    • Self
    Orchestral Manoeuvres in the Dark
    Orchestral Manoeuvres in the Dark
    • Themselves
    • (as Orchestral Manoeuvres)
    Paul Humphreys
    • Self - Orchestral Manoeuvres
    Andy McCluskey
    • Self - Orchestral Manoeuvres
    David A. Hughes
    • Self - Orchestral Manoeuvres
    Malcolm Holmes
    • Self - Orchestral Manoeuvres
    Chelsea
    • Themselves
    • Director
      • Derek Burbidge
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews30

    7.9919
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    Featured reviews

    jeff667

    Before it was pop...

    An excellent picture of what the punk/new wave scene was before the sound got co-opted by the mainstream. The Devo live performance really rocks, and you get to see many smaller artists that got overlooked when this genre took over the top 40. It really shows you how much fun and interesting music can be when it isn't being pushed by big labels and a band's sound can be created naturally without pressure to meet a certain standard. Last I saw it aired on the Sundance Channel.
    10jvframe

    musical history that needs repeating

    Update (written on 1st Oct '16): In late 2009 Warner Archives in the USA released a very high quality 16:9 (transferred from almost pristine film), glorious stereo, "burn on demand" single layer DVD edition of Urgh! The DVD is not quite perfect - there are just a few very minor split second, but noticeable, audio glitches. It would have been improved greatly if there were chapter marks at the start of each artist's performance (rather than every 10 minutes) and if a running order playlist was printed on the cover. The big advantage over all previous tape and LaserDisc editions is that the synch of video and audio is precise throughout (other editions had severe synch errors especially in both Pere Ubu and Devo - with the audio a full third of a second in advance of the video). The only artist missing from the Warner Archives DVD is Splodgeness Abounds, with their punk version of the Rolf Harris ditty "Two Little Boys" (no great loss). This is likely to be the only version ever released on digital and it is 99% of everything I could have hoped for. NB: because this is a 16:9 transfer from original film we get more information left and right than was shown in any of the 4:3 versions (tape or LaserDisc), and what is cropped slightly from the top and bottom of the film frame is worth the sacrifice.

    My original 2003 review. comment was:

    Urgh! is the finest ever collection of alternative music performance, by artists at the prime of their stage careers.

    An important and lasting legacy of Urgh! was that it brought some previously unknown bands to the attention of a much broader audience than would ever have been possible otherwise. I'm referring here to acts such as Skafish, (the late) Klaus Nomi, The Alley Cats, Gang Of Four, Pere Ubu, X and The Cramps.

    No-one could fail to want more of The Cramps after seeing Lux Interior deepthroat his hi-ball mic, while barely staying in his pants. Jim Skafish's "Sign Of The Cross" is another highlight - as a blasphemous anthem of epic proportions.

    There are only a few performances that I really thought were so-so (Chelsea, 999, John Otway, Invisible Sex); a few more were "good", but the vast majority were amazingly good.

    Even on the poor quality transfer to LaserDisc you can appreciate that Urgh! was filmed with care and with genuine respect for the performers and the viewer really feels like part of the audience.

    The bands all sound great - but strangely it's in mono on the LaserDisc & VHS, while the double album on vinyl is in extremely good stereo. So when someone finally gets around to doing it, surely there's a state-of-the-art DVD just begging to be mastered and released? And if a DVD does eventuate, let's hope they make up for the major failing of the LaserDisc, and include Wall Of Voodoo's "Back In Flesh".
    10BomageMinimart

    way cool groovy

    i remember being so impressed that someone had filmed the bands i was listening to as a kid.... i saw this movie in the theatre once and on cable about 400,000,000,000 times. I used to stay up and watch it on Night Flight (as so many others have mentioned) and it used to run on Showtime, HBO and Cinemax quite a bit back in the day. Awesome performances and a whole *@#$load of music that's all but been forgotten... like the best band and best performance in the movie (which thus far no one has mentioned): Gang of Four totally rocking out in London.

    If you really want to treat yerself, i highly recommend finding a copy of this, but wait to watch it until you can go back-to-back with Decline of Western Civilization. Ah, what a great time to be alive that was :D

    One of my favorite movies; I wish i could see it again (come on Rhino! save us from another pop diva and re-issue this film on DVD!)
    10billjsw

    Found out why there's no Urgh! A Music War DVD yet...(read on)

    Because of an exclusive contract to publish this movie on a now dead format (CED), the contracts for the individual artists are missing. Because you can't renegotiate a contract without the original to amend, no one can touch this. Its currently owned by its original producer, Miles Copeland (founder of IRS records), and he has the film of THREE songs from each band in storage, but because of the legal land lock he cannot release it. If he does some day, we can look forward to a 6 hour 2 DVD special edition.

    Pretty sad to say the very least. We can only hope one day (soon) that the original contracts will be found as this will make a MAJOR DVD release!! Oh, human error!!
    8treemarc

    Must see for hardcore new wave fans

    As everyone has already mentioned, you get over 30 performances, and at least half of them are classics. There are a few gems in the ones you've never heard of, and at least 5 or 10 you'll be wishing you had it on DVD so you could hit skip.

    The highlights- Oingo Boingo does "Ain't This The Life" from their first EP. The song itself is kinda rare (unavailable on CD except for their live Farewell album), and I've never seen Elfman so manic. (Coked-up?) Wall Of Voodoo does "Back In Flesh" and gets a tiny skit as well. Gary Numan does "Down In The Park" while driving a neon tank. Devo does the always great "Uncontrollable Urge". XTC performs- well I can't remember, but it's rare enough just seeing them perform. Dead Kennedy's whip through "Bleed For Me", complete with typical Jello Biafra opening rant. Joan Jett SMOKES "Bad Reputation". Surf Punks do an amusing "My Beach". Lux Interior of the Cramps wears a nearly-criminal pair of leather pants and deep throats a microphone during- I forget what song, but it's good. Klaus Nomi is, well Klaus Nomi- you may hate it, but it sure isn't boring. And of the bands you've never heard of, you'll never forget Skafish's "Sign Of The Cross".

    There are also good performances by Echo & The Bunnymen, OMD, The Police, Gang Of Four, X, Go-Go's, Magazine and a few others, but they never really stood out to me. I thought Pere Ubu's performance was substandard- I'm not a big fan, but I saw them once in the early 90's and they were great. Most of the unknown bands are just kind of dull, a few prove why they're unknown, like Athletico Spizz (or something like that- the one with the Silly String.) This is hard to find, but there are a lot of rental copies still floating around out there. I think it was on CBS/Fox video, so I don't know why it hasn't been put out on DVD.

    Storyline

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    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      According to the book ''Alternative Rock: Third Ear'' (2000) by Dave Thompson, all three Copeland brothers were involved in the making of this film. All the acts featured were represented by Miles A. Copeland III's IRS management company and booked by Ian Copeland's FBI Booking agency, and with three songs, drummer Stewart Copeland's The Police are featured more than any other act in this film.
    • Crazy credits
      The billing of the name of British singer Toyah Willcox in the closing credits is spelled incorrectly as "Toyah Wilcox".
    • Alternate versions
      The 94 minute theatrical version widely released in America by Filmways Pictures omits 10 songs and artists that appear in the 124 minute version released to U.S. home video. The selections missing from most theatrical prints are:
      • John Cooper Clarke - "Health Fanatic"
      • Chelsea - "I'm on Fire"
      • Athletico Spizz 80 - "Where's Captain Kirk?"
      • Magazine - "Model Worker"
      • The Members - "Offshore Banking Business"
      • Invisible Sex - "Valium"
      • Pere Ubu - "Birdies"
      • John Otway - "Cheryl's Going Home"
      • Skafish - "Sign of the Cross"
      • Splodgeness Abounds - "Two Little Boys"
    • Connections
      Featured in The Nomi Song (2004)
    • Soundtracks
      Driven to Tears
      Written by Sting

      Performed by The Police

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    FAQ10

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • October 29, 1981 (United Kingdom)
    • Country of origin
      • United Kingdom
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • A Music War
    • Filming locations
      • California Theatre, San Diego, California, USA
    • Production company
      • Lorimar Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 36m(96 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Stereo
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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