Evidently... John Cooper Clarke

2012

Evidently... John Cooper Clarke is a 2012 television documentary about the life of the Salford performance poet John Cooper Clarke. It was directed by John Ross and produced by Scotty Clark and was first aired on BBC Four in May 2012 as part of BBC Four and BBC 6 Music's "Punk Britannia" season. It features testimonies from Bill Bailey, Pete Shelley, Paul Farley, Steve Coogan, Mark Radcliffe, Craig Charles,[1] Plan B, Kate Nash, Alex Turner, Miranda Sawyer and Paul Morley;[2] and poems by Clarke including "Things Are Gonna Get Worse", "Evidently Chickentown", "Twat" and "Beasley Street".[1]

John Crace, writing for The Guardian, described the documentary as "a film that dealt in myths rather than reality" but assessed Clarke as "still clever, funny and relevant."[3] Mark Monahan in The Daily Telegraph wrote that the programme "veered too close to comfort towards hagiography" but "was nevertheless perhaps a fair reflection of the affection with which [Clarke] has been widely regarded."[4]

Quelle: Wikipedia(englisch)
Kinostart:2012
weitere Titel:
Evidently... John Cooper Clarke ast
Genre:Dokumentarfilm
Herstellungsland:Vereinigtes Königreich
Originalsprache:Englisch
Es liegt kein Transcript zu diesem Film vor.
Wenn Sie diese Daten spenden möchten, dann wenden Sie sich gerne an uns.

Rezensionen:

Datenstand: 09.06.2022 14:22:13Uhr