Live Forever
Live Forever - 2003 - Dvd Single
Technical info
- Regions: 2
- Disc number: 1
- Production year: 2003
- Release year: 2003
- Runtime: 86 Minutes
- Edition: Dvd Single
- Audience Rating: 15 And Over
- Screen ratios: 16:9
- Support: DVD: Single side, single layer
- Colour: Colour
- Compilation: No
- Concert: No
- Video: No
- Documentary: Yes
- Former rent: No
- Used: No
- UK Import
Audio tracks
- English - Dolby Digital 2.0 Stereo
Live Forever - Various Artists
It's hard to fill a music documentary with the same energy that ignited the movement, but Live Forever succeeds in charting the rise and decline of the Britpop genre with ease. Looking back on the 1990s phenomenon, it removes the rose-tinted spectacles that are so often donned for such retrospectives and looks at the trend and hype through a refreshing political perspective hinging around the New Labour government. It's fascinating to see how the spin doctors went to work on this new youth culture to increase popularity with voters. It was a time of political change, when, after long Conservative rule, people were looking forward to the future, and Cool Britannia filled a cultural hole. There was bizarre art from the likes of Emin and Hurst, and a vibrant music scene filled with "jolly" Blur tunes and Pulp's off-kilter takes on the working class. But it was Oasis's meteoric rise and the simultaneous "Lad" cultural stereotype they embodied that really gripped the nation's youth (both male and female). Live Forever offers interviews with the Gallagher brothers (who actually come across as sound geezers), Damon Albarn (who fares less well, and it becomes clear where director John Dower's commitment lay in the big Britpop battle) and the sublime Jarvis Cocker (who really should have become more of a cultural icon). Although Britpop ended after a blitz of cigarettes and alcohol, its place is sealed in music history. Just as The Filth and the Fury has become the must-see documentary on punk, Live Forever may well become the defining film of the 90s generation.
Tracklist
- Scene Selection
- Opening Credits
- Spike Island Beginning
- Out Of Place
- Oasis
- "What If"... Happened
- Oasis Vs. Blur
- Taking Center Stage
- Cool Britania
- Taken For A Ride
- This Is Hardcore
- The End of Brit Pop
- Ending Credits
Features
- Direct Scene Access
- Interactive Menu
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