Joe Strummer
10 titles
Filmography
10 results

Joe Strummer: The Future Is Unwritten
(2007)An ode to The Clash’s legendary frontman, whose influence persists after his death, featuring early recording sessions and interviews with bandmates.

The Clash : The Essential Clash
(2003)This critical review dives into the music that changed a generation by featuring rare footage from The Punk Rock Movie and Mick Jones' last gig.

Morphine: Journey of Dreams
(2014)The band Morphine blazed like a comet across the global music scene in the 90s with their bluesy rock until their tragic and untimely demise in 1999.

The Clash: The Rise and Fall of The Clash
(2012)The only up-close and personal film about the juggernaut band The Clash, and their meteoric trajectory through rock 'n' roll history.

Rude Boy
(1980)Somewhere between a Clash concert film and an electric, booze-soaked portrait of punk Britain stands Jack Hazan and David Mingay’s cult classic. A vital look at the values and rock revolutions of pre-Thatcher Britain which, like the music scene it documents, is raw, unpolished, and in-your-face.

The Clash: Live (Revolution Rock)
(2008)This programme draws on extensive footage of the Clash in performance and the fascinating anecdotes the band's original drummer Terry Chimes, Clash and Blockheads keyboardist Micky Gallagher, iconic film director Don Letts and many more as well as previously unseen drawings and cartoons by the legendary Ray Lowry.

Straight to Hell
(1987)Four hapless bank robbers bury their loot and attempt to hide out in an abandoned desert town, but very soon find out that they are not alone.

Candy Mountain
(1988)Strumming along to the syncopated rhythms of ‘80s America, Robert Frank and Rudy Wurlitzer’s cult film reckons with scraggy countercultural myths of the road. Gathering an alternative hit parade of faces—Jim Jarmusch! Bulle Ogier!—this rough diamond of independent cinema gleams in a new restoration.

D.O.A.
(1980)Legendaria pelÃcula de punk rock de los 80 con entrevistas y grabaciones de conciertos de bandas icónicas de la escena de finales de los 70.

Mystery Train
(1989)Aloof teenage Japanese tourists, a frazzled Italian widow, and a disgruntled British immigrant all converge in the city of dreams--which, in Mystery Train, from Jim Jarmusch, is Memphis. This triptych of stories pays playful tribute to the home of Stax Records, Sun Studio, Graceland, Carl Perkins, and, of course, the King, who presides over the film like a spirit.