Good youth films,funny enough got tickets for The Specials next April and they added another date all sold out.
Iain just ignore the tit. He thinks his dinner party bullshit will wash on here but he is sadly mistaken. A book/film quite obviously based on the inner city deprivation of Thatchers 1980s Britain is all about Blair and Britpop even though the book and film were both released long before Blair smiled his first greasy smile in Downing street. In fact John Smith was the leader of the Labour party when the book was released. I'm sure ST's pish goes down well with the capital's dinner party set. Unfortunately it has no relation to actual reality.
The book, as I said, was set in the 1980s. The film was released in 1996 and was, as I said, very much a product of 90s Britain. How is this so difficult for you to understand Aldo? Do you have mental health problems? Are you ******ed perhaps?
I mean, I could be wrong, but the song synonymous with the film, Underworld's Born Slippy, was released in 1995, not 1985. Oasis were also asked to contribute to the film but Noel Gallagher turned it down because he genuinely thought it was a film about Trainspotting. The film pretty much encapsulates the whole 90s cool Britannia phase but, hey, who am I to argue with a genius like you Aldo.
Oh please! There are quite a few songs synonymous with the film ffs. Lust for life, 90s Britpop? Perfect day, Tony Blair's ascendancy to leader of the Labour party? Atomic, how much of a bomb your faux intellectual middle class bùlshit analysis has went down? Every Danny Boyle films have quality soundtracks. Born Slippy was a little known track until it appeared in Trainspotting. Yet here you are using it as an example of Boyle's reverence of new Labour and Britpop! Fùck up ya knob.
Aldo making a total **** of himself again. "Let's make a film about the Thatcherite 1980s Danny." "Sure. What song shall we use as the main theme?" "Erm, how about Underworld's Born Slippy? What says glum, recession-hit 80s Britain like a stomping techno/trance song from the future!"
It's not a film about 1980s Thatcherite Britain. It's a film about 1980s Edinburgh heroin addicts. It certainly has **** all to do with Britpop Britain. Main theme song? Wtf does that mean? End credit song? Lust for life is the end credit song for T2. Interested to know what geo political bullshit you think that signifies.
How very apt as a lot of people go to watch movies and eat popcorn. Not me though, I think popcorn is ****ing disgusting.