Maybe f*** is a bad word because we don't know where or how it started; who knows? Maybe we're just too f***ing sensitive...
Fuck (2006)
Runtime: 1 hr 33 mins
Theatrical Release: 00-00-0000
Synopsis: This challenging and provocative documentary takes a look on all sides of the infamous F-word. Its taboo, obscene and controversial, yet somehow seems to permeate every single aspect of our culture - from Hollywood... to the schoolyard to the Senate floor in Washington D.C. It's the... This challenging and provocative documentary takes a look on all sides of the infamous F-word. Its taboo, obscene and controversial, yet somehow seems to permeate every single aspect of our culture - from Hollywood... to the schoolyard to the Senate floor in Washington D.C. It's the word at the very center of the debate on Free Speech - and everyone seems to have an opinion. FUCK will exam how the word is impacting our world today thru interviews, film and television clips, music, and original animation by Oscar nominee Bill Plympton. Scholars and linguists will examine the long history of fuck. Comedians, actors, and writers who have charted and popularized the upward course of fuck will be heard from, often while defending the Constitutional Right of Free Speech, all the way to the Supreme Court. FUCK will visit with those who actually fuck for a living. We'll hear from advocates who oppose fuck and it's infringement into our everyday lives. We'll watch some of the most famous and infamous film and television clips that feature fuck, we'll hear some of the most famous fucks ever uttered and we'll feel the impact of fuck on our everyday lives. -- Official Site [More]
Genre: Education/General Interest
Starring: Steven Bochco, Pat Boone, Drew Carey, Billy Connolly, Chuck D
DVD Info
Release:
Jan 2, 2008
DVD Features:
- Keep Case
- Anamorphic Widescreen - 16:9
Audio:
- Dolby Digital 5.1 - English
- Closed Captioned - English
Additional Release Material:
- Audio Commentary - Steve Anderson - Director
- Production Interviews (extended) - (unspecified)
- Original Theatrical Trailer
- Trailers
Interactive Features:
- Interactive Menus
- Scene Selection
Reviews
This isn't really a documentary so much as a celebration -- of one word's power to twist people in knots.
This film is probably not going to change anyone's view about this particular word, but it is an interesting, informative, and often entertaining take on the subject.
Anderson's film is surprisingly amusing, as well as insightful, even if viewers have to sit through about 800 uses of the word in the 90-minute film.
Anderson's jumpy editing fails to cover up the fact that he only has 30 good minutes of material here.
The inclusion of the porn footage and supposedly comical cartoons (by Bill Plympton) don't really add anything to the film. In fact, they're shockingly irrelevant.
What's great about the documentary is the mix of people Anderson interviews for opinions and insights.
Anderson's glib approach is to the movie's advantage, allowing anything profound to seem unexpected.
But in the end, F*CK is at most a compendium of opinions and examples, and never feels like a story.
As a history of the ultimate epithet, F--- falls somewhat short, tracing its use to the 15th century but failing to pin down its origins. It's on surer ground as a free-speech quasi-polemic, with its talking-head debate format.
It doesn't all cohere and it doesn't make any point that you couldn't have predicted before it began. There's a sense of self-satisfied naughtiness to the film that undercuts any claims it can make to being transgressive.
The most dishonest thing about this ranting montage of a movie is its technique of panning between opposing viewpoints to simulate debate, when in fact each of the more than 35 celebrities was separately interviewed.
But F*** gives short shrift to a question that many moviegoers may well ponder: How, exactly, has this word become a substitute for wit, or, in many movies, for dialogue?
If anything, the most vivid impression created by the movie is how much fun the word's use can potentially be and how its power is inevitably emboldened in direct proportion to the forces of decency lined up against it.
... It's a mere 90-some minutes long; it only feels like seven hours.
... manages to strip some of the mystique from the forbidden word, and in the end, despite some road bumps, is a satisfying film.
Keeps a buoyant tone and a fast pace, flitting from one angle to another rapidly and including a lot of raucous humor along the way.
Obviously this film is going to be rated NC-17, to protect children who have already used the term hundreds of times a month, from hurting their dear little ears with the horrid profanity.
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