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Born to Lose

  • 1999
  • 1h 30m
IMDb RATING
5.8/10
125
YOUR RATING
Francis Fallon and David Goldman in Born to Lose (1999)
ComedyDramaMusic

Born to Lose is a shoestring film that takes a pseudo-documentary glipmse into the punk periphery of the Los Angeles music scene and lead singer, Stevie Monroe's odyssey of nihilism.Born to Lose is a shoestring film that takes a pseudo-documentary glipmse into the punk periphery of the Los Angeles music scene and lead singer, Stevie Monroe's odyssey of nihilism.Born to Lose is a shoestring film that takes a pseudo-documentary glipmse into the punk periphery of the Los Angeles music scene and lead singer, Stevie Monroe's odyssey of nihilism.

  • Director
    • Doug Cawker
  • Writers
    • Doug Cawker
    • Howard Roth
  • Stars
    • Joseph Rye
    • Francis Fallon
    • Elyse Ashton
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.8/10
    125
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Doug Cawker
    • Writers
      • Doug Cawker
      • Howard Roth
    • Stars
      • Joseph Rye
      • Francis Fallon
      • Elyse Ashton
    • 7User reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    Born To Lose - Trailer
    Clip 2:06
    Born To Lose - Trailer

    Photos18

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    Top cast10

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    Joseph Rye
    • Stevie
    Francis Fallon
    Francis Fallon
    • Johnny
    Elyse Ashton
    Elyse Ashton
    • Lisa
    David Goldman
    David Goldman
    • Bob
    Alex Lange
    • Walter
    Wendy Latta
    Wendy Latta
    • Janie
    Mo Gallini
    Mo Gallini
    • Bartender
    • (as Matt Gallini)
    Laura Niemi
    Laura Niemi
    • Beth Anderson
    Mary Ann Schmidt
    Mary Ann Schmidt
    • Blonde Groupie
    Peter Wierzbicki
    • Syd's boyfriend
    • Director
      • Doug Cawker
    • Writers
      • Doug Cawker
      • Howard Roth
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews7

    5.8125
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    Featured reviews

    10mb-45

    The Agony and the Ecstasy

    "Perhaps one has to have been "there" to fully grasp the intent of this film. It is in it's purest form, fully "agony" and "ecstasy" combined. One only has to let go, plug-in and go for "the ride" to truly appreciate where this film and this filmmaker are coming from. Because at the "end of the day", we are all simply "Born to Lose"

    Thank you for one heck of a "ride", Doug Cawker, wherever you are.
    5chas77

    Ultimately a disappointment

    I really wanted to like this film seeing as how it has such an excellent soundtrack (which I believe was released by Bomp! and something you should pick up if you like garage punk) by bands like Trash Can School, the Zeros, Texas Terri, etc.

    As someone who has been to punk gigs in LA throughout the '90s I can't say I knew one person who was as screwed up as the lead singer. The writer/director has stated in interviews that he was trying to mold the lead character after Johnny Thunders. Thunders was one of a kind. Perhaps the film should have been set in the '70's where such a cliched story (we've all seen "Sid and Nancy") would fit better and be more realistic.

    Photography and acting are pretty good but the sound in some scenes is really awful. Take the last scene of the movie: I had no idea who the old guy in the wheelchair was or what the lead character was saying and why he was taking the dude's wheelchair. Why was this scene even included?

    Overall, a disappointment. It would be cool to see a realistic film about the '90's LA-garage punk scene someday. This just ain't it. 5/10
    3the_mighty_one99

    Good but gets worse and worse

    The movie had quite a 'humourous' beginning, and it gradually got worse and worse and the movie went on. The sound quality seemed to cut out through the movie and get louder and quieter at times, it ends off very weirdly, and with the lack of sound, it makes the ending especially messed up. However, its not all bad, if you can get past the low budget, the part of the story i understood was actually alright.
    8blueskynorm

    For people who don't like to shop.

    A film for punks and would be punks, a story for pukes, assholes and people who think they are neither. It's characters are for people a little tired of the "world mall" we are all forced to live in. It is not a film for people with a "ma and pa" rosey world view . It is not for the puking punks with an "ain't music fun" as they react to their ma and pa's rosey world for the weekend. Back to their real life; Monday at 8:00 am.

    This film is for people who believe in something and are struck by the pain of not being able to reach it because they know they are the hurdle that must be over come. This film will dig at a hidden part of any human heart.

    This film came from an honest place. Yes, at times, it was very rough in it's presentation (a great tip-off that it wasn't made by some unexamined film school, suburban cog or a son of a big wheel that really should really be a butcher, a baker or a candlestick maker). This film didn't posed (even though some of its characters did.) There was a inner hardness in some of the characters that was presented in a plain manner. Not everyone will like this style.

    The events and images are not bright and happy (or even unnecessarily dark) but it has a respect for its subject. This is not another outsiders view of a world that is "cool". This is not another fake mockumentary made with a mind fueled by a Big Gulp diet.

    There is no risk in laughing at someone you don't really know.

    This film mocks itself. Born to Lose is fuelled by all that can be destructive about booze, drugs and human beings.

    It is also not a glorification of a musical rant or a ranting personality. It's the blah, blah, blah of music and one ordinary guy.

    Yes, some of the support acting seemed a lot like trying hard to act but somehow that didn't matter to the story or even the characters. There was always this sense of tumbling and falling with the events. It's as if the characters had seen their end - our end - and said screw it, "it just doesn't matter what I think or what I do". A viewer doesn't have to agree or disagree with this P.O.V. because the characters don't care if they do or don't or die.

    "Born to Lose" shows you the dog s**t in the middle of the sidewalk and allows you to step around the s**t or jump on it and track it around your own 'hood.

    I give it an 8 out of 10 (if this was baseball that would be a batting average of ......? Note: If you can answer a baseball trivia question you should skip this movie and go to the mall - shop or hang-out or shoot a mockumentary, it just doesn't matter.
    8solarone

    Why do so many bands die before making it big. Here it is.

    Yea we know it's not "Born To Win", so going downhill with the band, some bad drugs and twisted sex has it's high and low points. If you want to join the boys for this Rock & Roll train wreck, check out how the big three are handled. First,Rock & Roll, the band stuff is the most interesting part of this movie, it has a real look at bands at this level of non-success. You can see this is where the filmmaker had the most fun and the most insight. The band members are not over done but real. Second, Sex, I wish this band had been more popular and had groupies. Mostly the lead singer and the girlfriend's(he would dump if he made it big) relationship. Could use more sex but what can't. Third, Drugs, This is the only part that we have seen to many times before. We needed a little more inspiration here. The filmmaker had fun with the R&R and the sex but not with the old monkey on the back. So in the end did you have fun going downhill with the band? Yea we had some laughs, some good times, some bad, some good songs and fighting robots. Sex,Drugs,Rock & Roll can be Dangerous. Don"t try this at home kids.

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      Laura Niemi's debut.
    • Soundtracks
      Criminals
      by the Joneses

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • February 16, 1999 (Canada)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Official site
      • Astor Place Films
    • Language
      • English
    • Production company
      • Astor Place Films
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      1 hour 30 minutes
    • Sound mix
      • Stereo

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    Francis Fallon and David Goldman in Born to Lose (1999)
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