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XTC: This Is Pop 2017 123movies

XTC: This Is Pop 2017 123movies

Oct. 07, 201775 Min.
Your rating: 0
7 1 vote

Synopsis

Watch: XTC: This Is Pop 2017 123movies, Full Movie Online – A brand new film on one of Britain’s best-loved and most influential bands of modern times, XTC. Emerging from the late 1970s punk and new wave explosion, XTC amassed a devoted following with hit singles Making Plans For Nigel, Sgt. Rock (Is Going To Help Me), Senses Working Overtime, Dear God and Mayor Of Simpleton. A colourful and vibrant journey into the world of XTC and their alter-ego band, The Dukes Of Stratosphear, the film includes newly filmed interviews with Andy Partridge, Colin Moulding, Dave Gregory and Terry Chambers. Through a mixture of animation, archive and specially-shot sequences, the film opens up the world of XTC and into the brilliant minds of principle songwriters, Messrs Partridge and Moulding..
Plot: A journey into the world of one of Britain’s best-loved and most influential bands of modern times, XTC. Through a mixture of animation, archive and specially-shot sequences, the film explores the minds of principle songwriters, Partridge and Moulding.
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Ratings:

7.5/10 Votes: 331
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N/A Votes: 8 Popularity: 2.569 | TMDB

Reviews:

Swindon calling
Rather like one of their albums, this “rockumentary” as Andy Partridge disses it, is suitably bright and quirky but with an undertone of bathos nonetheless. Hailing from darkest Swindon, the group’s two main men, songwriters Partridge and Colin Moulding and fellow members some short-lived, some longer term, especially guitarist Dave Gregory, charted an irregular passage across the English landscape and beyond. Whilst they never achieved any great lasting commercial success, they flirted with the charts here and across the black sea in America fairly frequently although as one of their admirers here admits, their devoted fan-base probably never wanted their secret to get out to too many.

I don’t know all their music but adore their “Skylarking” album and possess this and their superb singles compilation “Fossil Fuel” in my collection.

I liked the graphics interspersing the piece of toy-town models running around the countryside on some big express train, a metaphor not only for their nondescript small town roots but also their circular journey through the pop landscape arriving here and there at nowhere in particular.

Group leader Andy Partridge dominates the narrative, he has the most to say for sure and whilst coming across occasionally like a self-important pain-in-the-proverbial, his passion for his (white) music and “his” band shines through. Colin Moulding, who probably ended up writing more chart hits for the group, along with long-time guitarist Gregory and drummer Terry Chambers, seem more down-to-earth and less flighty than Mr Partridge.

There aren’t that many actual significant events in the group’s history the director can really go 2 for dramatic effect. Apart from the group’s early inclusion in the punk / new wave movement, Partridge’s psychosomatic illness which forced the group off the road, the furore in America of Partridge’s bleak atheistic “Dear God”, it’s really just a tale of musical skylarking from first to last especially after the group stopped touring to concentrate on drums and wires studio work.

Of course this is the road the Beatles took in the 60’s and Partridge cheekily equates his group to the Fab Four’s progress near the end of the film. Their fans and friends here include Stewart Copeland of the Police, Clem Burke of Blondie and a bunch of modern musicians I admit I didn’t recognise, plus there’s a neat rock-doc in-joke as Rick Wakeman makes his omnipresent drop-in appearance.

So while I may be The Mayor Of Simpleton, I know one thing and that’s that I liked this documentary.

Review By: Lejink
Delightful (if a bit Andy Partridge-centric) rockumentary
“XTC – This Is Pop” (2017 release from the UK; 75 min.) is a rock documentary about the British band XTC. As the film opens, we see Andy Partridge egging on the viewer about how much he disdains “rockumentaries” in general (but then of course he goes on to fully participate in this one). We then go back in time to Partridge’s upbringing in Swindon (80 mi. west of London) as an only child, leading him to entertain himself much of the time since Mum wouldn’t allow other kids to the house. It eventually brings him to discover music: “I wasn’t good enough to learn other people’s music, so I starting writing my own songs”, ha! It leads to the mid-70s punk-ish start of the Helium Kids, which then morphed into XTC…

Couple of comments: this documentary does a nice job of tracing the origins, and evolution, of “smart pop” band XTC. I grew up in Belgium and they’ve been a favorite of mine since their 1979 hit “Making Plans for Nigel”. While there are lots of “talking heads” in the film (I particularly enjoyed the Police’s Stewart Copeland’s comments about their touring together in the early 80s–his brother Ian apparently was manager of both bands), it needs to be pointed out that the documentary is definitely Andy Partridge-centric. But in the end I mostly enjoyed this for the band members reminiscing on how great songs like “Making Plans for Nigel” and “Senses Working Overtime” came about. Everyone has their favorite XTC album, and mine is 1986’s “Skylarking”. I had no idea how much Partridge butted heads with producer Todd Rundgren (as sis made clear in this documentary), but in the end it all worked out as it is a brilliant album and remains so now 30+ years later…

“XTC – This Is Pop” premiered on Showtime in 2018, and I completely missed it at that time. I finally stumbled on this and watched it on Showtime On Demand the other night. Whether you are a casual (?) or die-hard fan of XTC, I’d readily suggest you check this out, and draw your own conclusion.

Review By: paul-allaer

Other Information:

Original Title XTC: This Is Pop
Release Date 2017-10-07
Release Year 2017

Original Language en
Runtime N/A
Budget 0
Revenue 0
Status Released
Rated TV-14
Genre Documentary, Music
Director Roger Penny, Charlie Thomas
Writer N/A
Actors Barry Andrews, Clem Burke, Terry Chambers
Country United Kingdom
Awards N/A
Production Company N/A
Website N/A


Technical Information:

Sound Mix N/A
Aspect Ratio N/A
Camera N/A
Laboratory N/A
Film Length N/A
Negative Format N/A
Cinematographic Process N/A
Printed Film Format N/A

XTC: This Is Pop 2017 123movies
XTC: This Is Pop 2017 123movies
XTC: This Is Pop 2017 123movies
XTC: This Is Pop 2017 123movies
XTC: This Is Pop 2017 123movies
XTC: This Is Pop 2017 123movies
XTC: This Is Pop 2017 123movies
XTC: This Is Pop 2017 123movies
XTC: This Is Pop 2017 123movies
XTC: This Is Pop 2017 123movies
Original title XTC: This Is Pop
TMDb Rating 7.7 8 votes

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Director

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