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The Exploited Movies

2003  
 
British punk mainstays The Exploited offer up their traditional mixture of guitar firepower and political outrage in this concert video, which was recorded during an Eastern European festival appearance in 2003. The Exploited: Beat 'Em All includes the songs "Troops of Tomorrow," "Let's Start a War," "Punks Not Dead," "Beat the Bastards," "Never Sell Out," "UK 82" and many more. ~ Mark Deming, Rovi

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1996  
 
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Veteran British punk rockers The Exploited have built a career out of making trouble and refusing to be silenced, and this documentary examines their over twenty years on the road. The Exploited: Rock & Roll Outlaws features extensive interview footage with group leader Wattie Buchan, as well as plenty of rare concert footage taken from the band's archives. Songs include "Punk's Not Dead," "Exploited Barmy Army," "I Believe in Anarchy," "Sex and Violence," "Army Life," and more. ~ Mark Deming, Rovi

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1994  
 
Music performance. Includes performances of "War Now," "Alternative," "Rival Leaders," "Cop Cars," and "Sex & Violence." With interviews. ~ Rovi

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1981  
 
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Director Alan Clarke's influential television drama Made in Britain marked the screen debut of actor Tim Roth. Roth plays Trevor, a skinhead with a swastika tattoo on his forehead who lashes out verbally and sometimes physically at everything that surrounds him. Cinematographer Chris Menges (who would go on to win Oscars for his work on The Killing Fields and The Mission), gets his camera right in Roth's snarling face, as the film tracks Trevor's progress through the British justice system. In the courtroom, charged with attacking a Pakistani man and vandalizing his store, Trevor displays absolutely no remorse as he matter-of-factly admits that he knew the man would have to be hospitalized for his injuries. Trevor's social worker, Harry (Eric Richard), recognizes Trevor's intelligence, but he's running out of ways to convince Trevor to straighten out his life. Harry takes him to a juvenile detention center for "assessment," after which he'll be sentenced. Trevor immediately dismisses Peter (Bill Stewart), the put-upon supervisor of the center, as a "wanker." He meets his black roommate, Errol (Terry Richards), whom he quickly convinces to come out with him on a car-stealing, glue-sniffing, job-center-vandalizing day trip. Brazenly returning to the detention center in a stolen car, Trevor eventually provokes Peter into locking him in a classroom, so a police superintendent (Geoffrey Hutchings) can harangue him about the hopeless path his life is taking. Trevor refuses to accept the center's (and society's) standards for "good behavior," raging that they all just want everyone to follow the rules and keep their mouths shut. The script was written by David Leland (Wish You Were Here) and the songs on the soundtrack are by the anarchist hardcore band the Exploited. ~ Josh Ralske, Rovi

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