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List Price: $19.99 | | Label: Image Entertainment
Salesrank: 15567
Released: April 5, 2005 |
| Our Price: $9.49 |
| Used Price: $9.49 |
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MPAA Rating: NR (Not Rated) Media: DVD |
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| Features:
Color DVD-Video Full Screen Dolby NTSC | |
Editorial Review:
See the gripping rise of the first all-girl hard rock band, its hopes and dreams, and its eventual disintegration as the result of media belittling, in-fighting and drug use amidst rumors of verbal and emotional abuse by the band's management.
Edgeplay - A Film About The Runaways Reviews:
Wonderful... Though Something Significant is Missing. 
2008-09-14 - The significant is Joan Jett. All the Runaways participate and Fowley even rears his arrogance for all to see but Jett is nowhere to be found outside of the historical footage. This is still a great behind-the-scenes retrospective through interviews (the girls still look great today) and quick flashback glimpses through concert and touring footage. It could have been spiced up with more Runaways material from the era; the footage of the Velvet's "Rock and Roll" live is a highlight. I grew right along with them and though I was a male in the audience, felt their ups and downs. I also took offense at Mr. Fowleys assessment of The Runaways' male audience at the time... he missed me by a mile. Ms. Blue is to be commended for her efforts.
Great...where are the originals? 
2008-07-26 - I'll admit, I loved "watching" the Runaways far far better than listening to them ~ but I absolutely adore Joan Jett. (Sometimes, though, ask me what happened when my guitar player purchased Lita Ford's, I think, second album...) Still: WHEN IS SOMEBODY GOING TO MAKE AN ABJECTLY SYCOPHANTIC MOVIE ABOUT FANNY, who not only were there first and did it much better, but were infinitely more attractive? YO, David Bowie, R U listening?
Where's Joan ? 
2007-04-17 - I was so excited to see the DVD. I've been a fan of Joan Jett & the Runaways for as long as I can remember. The documentary was interesting enough, but I couldn't stop wishing that Joan Jett was in it. Why wasn't she in it & so on. This became very distracting. It was cool to hear the points of view from the other ladies & see where they all wound up.
lively film -- hostility misplaced 
2007-04-10 - This is the story of five untalented women who were led to brief commercial success by a brilliant Hollywood huckster, Kim Fowley. None of the music they made is worth a damn -- and Joan Jett has to be one of the least interesting rock stars of the last 25 years -- but Fowley is rather fascinating. Even if he seems Machiavelian at times, he is the biggest talent on the screen, and the whining and moaning about his "exploitation" merely seems silly for, without him, these women would be slinging hash in Orange County now.
A Surprisingly Good Documentary 
2006-11-16 - I haven't listened to the Runaways in over 20 years, and even then, only listened to one album, their first. I came to it by way of Joan Jett, whom I liked. I wasn't crazy about the Runaways album. This film, however, reveals a group of girls who were, in fact, quite talented and strong, and who became skilled and made some good music.
Unlike other reviewers, I don't see Kim Fowley as quite the abusive sleazebag they did...More, he was a banal, self-important, smarmy, drover. Did he take advantage of them? Perhaps. They didn't seem to make any money to speak of during their 5 years together--there's no mention of what Fowley walked away with, either, though. And if he used them, he also groomed them. The girls were (understandably) unprepared for the hard realities of the music business. And they didn't like it when Kim called them names. Say whatever you want about Fowley, though, he took a bunch of inexperienced, horomonal, undisciplined kids who didn't know a whole lot of music, and he turned them into professionals. He made them rock stars; he gave them a shot at something great. He just didn't seem to be very good at managing teenage girls--is anyone? They were kids, and left to their owen devices, they drank; they took drugs--lots of them; they had sex--with each other, with one of their managers, with who-knows-who else.
The film seems weirdly lopsided without a contribution from Joan Jett. She went on in post-Runaways life to enjoy the greatest fame, and it is peculiar that all the other bandmates contributed to the movie, but she didn't. This odd omission isn't even mentioned in the film, or in the extras. Jett appears, of course, in the archive footage from the 70s, but that's it.
Blue assembles footage and interviews that successfully evoke sympathy and even affection for these kids, and I would have liked to know more about what became of them after the Runaways broke up. Blue, of course, is a filmmaker. Jett is a muy butch rock star who likes to tease her fans about her sexual orientation. Ford, too, went on to become a successful musician with some hits in the late 80s (no mention of this in the movie, though). Sandy, the drummer, seems by the end of the movie bitter--she went on to become an arm-breaker and money collector for drug dealers, and to work "in construction." That's all we really know about her Runaways afterlife. What about Jackie Fox, the original bass player? Despite having fled the band after trying to carve herself up with a piece of broken glass, she seems in the interview footage to be pretty together. She is articulate, intelligent, clear.
Devoting too much time to their post-band lives would have unfocused the film, but something could have been included that would both concluded the film and resonated with what preceded it. Failing, that, something could have been included in the Extras.
Also, did I miss something here? Is there no actual recorded concert footage with music in this movie?
Maybe I'm nitpicking. I also realize that it probably isn't really a 5-star movie, for the reasons I've mentioned. Still, I enjoyed the film. There was nothing about the film I didn't enjoy. As another reviewer pointed out, this is clearly a labor of love, and therefore deserving of whatever generosit we can muster. (Parents should see it as a cautionary tale: Don't let your daughters join rock bands!)