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S.F.W.

 
Movies:

S.F.W.

 
  • Director: Jefery Levy
  • AMG Rating: starstar
  • Genre: Comedy Drama
  • Movie Type: Media Satire
  • Themes: Terrorism, Hostage Situations
  • Main Cast: Stephen Dorff, Reese Witherspoon, Jake Busey, Joey Lauren Adams, Pam Gidley
  • Release Year: 1994
  • Country: US
  • Run Time: 92 minutes
  • MPAA Rating: R

Plot

Embracing the supposed nihilism and cynicism of the "slacker" generation, S.F.W. (1995) caused nary a blip on the media-saturated cultural radar screen that it criticized. Stephen Dorff stars as Cliff Spab, an aimless, hard-drinking youth. Spab becomes a national hero when he is one of several people held hostage by gun-toting terrorists in a convenience store. He doesn't care much about his own life or anything else, and his attitude of "So f---ing what?" translates into debates with his terrorist captors and gloomy pronouncements that charm viewers. After a month-long siege, a crisis erupts when the store runs out of beer and junk food, so Cliff finds himself a free man whose celebrity image is emblazoned on t-shirts and whose presence is requested at a rock concert where he is required to do nothing other than appear. In the meantime, Spab's girlfriend Wendy (Reese Witherspoon) becomes a ubiquitous talk show guest. Ostensibly a satire of the celebrity-obsessed culture of the 1990s, the film was withheld from distribution for a year because of thematic similarities to Oliver Stone's Natural Born Killers (1994). ~ Karl Williams, All Movie Guide

Cast

David Barry Gray - Scott Spab; Jack Noseworthy - Joe Dice; Richard Portnow - Gerald Parsley; Ed Wiley - Mr. Spab; Lela Ivey - Mrs. Spab; Steve Antin - Dick Zetterland; Kathryn Atwood - Pebbles Goren; Caroline Barclay - Mindy Lawford; Amber Benson - Barbara "Babs" Wyler; John Chaidez - Burger Boy Worker; Gary Coleman - Himself; Frank Collison - Stoner Witness; Lisa Dinkins - Reporter; Virgil Frye - Earl; Gary Grossman - Talent Agent; Annie McEnroe - Dolly; Philip Moon - Reporter; Soon-Teck Oh - Milt Morris; John Roarke - Phil Donahue Clone/Sam Donaldson Clone/Alan Dershowit; Francesca Roberts - Kim Martin; Sylvia Short - Doctor Travis; Ben Slack - Madison Heights Mayor; Adam Small - Burger Boy Manager; Blair Tefkin - Allison Ash; Natasha Gregson Wagner - Kristen; Michelle Seipp - Hotel Receptionist; Tobey Maguire - Al; China Kantner - Female Pantyhose Gunman

Credit

Philip Messina - Art Director, Gloria Lopez - Associate Producer, Owens Hill - Casting, Rachel Abroms - Casting, Mike Nelson - Co-producer, Debra McGuire - Costume Designer, John E. Vohlers - First Assistant Director, Jefery Levy - Director, Lauren Zuckerman - Editor, Graeme Revell - Composer (Music Score), David B. Chornow - Musical Direction/Supervision, Dana Sano - Musical Direction/Supervision, Sharon Boyle - Musical Direction/Supervision, Brian Williams - Musical Direction/Supervision, Michele Vice - Songwriter, Cheryl Voss - Makeup, Eve Cauley - Production Designer, Peter Deming - Cinematographer, Dale Pollock - Producer, Sigurjon Sighvatsson - Producer, Sandy Struth - Set Designer, Frank Ceglia - Special Effects, David Chornow - Sound Mixer, Douglas Murray - Sound/Sound Designer, Mark Jan Wlodarkiewicz - Sound Editor, Steve M. Davison - Stunts Coordinator, Mike Nelson - Unit Production Manager, Jefery Levy - Screenwriter, Danny Rubin - Screenwriter, Scott Browner - First Assistant Camera, Louis di Cesare - Gaffer, Brian Branigan - Key Grip, Josh Winget - Music Editor, Chris White - Production Coordinator, Sam Lehmer - Re-Recording Mixer, Harry Jarvis - Second Assistant Director, Wren Maloney - Still Photographer, Corwin A. Bibb - Best Boy Electric, Stacy Pinhas - Casting Associate, Tim Collins - Dolly Grip, Lee Auerbach - Electrician, Timothy Durr - Electrician, Margie O'Malley - Foley Artist, Tim Clawson - Production Executive, Andrew Wellman - Book Author, Jonathan Null - Assistant Visual Effects Editor

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Album Review: S.F.W.
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  • Artist: Original Soundtrack
  • Rating: StarStarStarStar
  • Release Date: 1995
  • Total Time: 50:35
  • Type: Soundtrack, Contains explicit content
  • Genre: Rock

Review

It became the norm in the 1990s to throw together a film soundtrack featuring some of the more popular "alternative" bands of the day in the hope that this would gain the soundtrack a modicum of credibility, if not success. The soundtrack to the movie S.F.W. is no exception to this rule, although it does manage to put together an entertaining group of songs that, for good or bad, reflected mid-'90s alternative rock. Opening with one of Soundgarden's finest moments, "Jesus Christ Pose," the tone has been well and truly set, and the fact that elsewhere songs by Hole, Marilyn Manson, Suicidal Tendencies, Monster Magnet, and Babes in Toyland appear should come as no surprise. Where this album succeeds is when it gets a little less predictable. The psychedelic "Can I Stay?" by Pretty Mary Sunshine is no less than superb, Chris Cornell's solo take on "Like Suicide" is haunting and near-perfect, and Paw's "Surrender," while more or less standard fare, is performed with plenty of energy. Predictable, maybe. Commercial, certainly. But any soundtrack that can include both Radiohead's anthemic "Creep" and the silly thrash metal of GWAR's "S.F.W." is worthy of a second listen. ~ Jonathan Lewis, All Music Guide

Tracks

Track TitleComposersPerformersTime
Jesus Christ Pose Matt Cameron, Chris Cornell, Ben Shepherd, Kim Thayil Soundgarden (5:51)
Get Your Gunn Marilyn Manson, Daisy Berkowitz, Gidget Gein Marilyn Manson (3:19)
Can I Stay? Kurt Elzner (3:04)
Teenage Whore Eric Erlandson, Courtney Love Hole (2:56)
Negasonic Teenage Warhead Dave Wyndorf Monster Magnet (5:00)
Like Suicide [Acoustic Version] Chris Cornell Chris Cornell (6:11)
No Fuck'n Problem Mike Muir, Mike Clark Suicidal Tendencies (3:31)
Surrender Rick Nielsen Paw (3:56)
Creep Colin Greenwood, Jonny Greenwood, Ed O'Brien, Phil Selway, Thom Yorke Radiohead (3:57)
Two at a Time Cop Shoot Cop (4:01)
Say What You Want Kat Bjelland, Lori Barbero, Maureen Herman Babes in Toyland (3:35)
S.F.W. Peter Lee, Casey Orr, Brad Roberts GWAR (2:18)
Spab 'N' Janet Evening/The Green Room Graeme Revell Graeme Revell (2:56)

Credits

Babes in Toyland (Performer), GWAR (Performer), Soundgarden (Performer), Suicidal Tendencies (Performer), Cop Shoot Cop (Performer), Monster Magnet (Performer), Paw (Performer), Radiohead (Performer), Marilyn Manson (Performer), Graeme Revell (Producer), Graeme Revell (Performer), Keith Cleversley (Producer), Keith Cleversley (Engineer), Chris Cornell (Performer), Terry Date (Producer), Terry Date (Engineer), Don Fleming (Engineer), Kim Gordon (Producer), Paul Q. Kolderie (Producer), Paul Q. Kolderie (Engineer), Sylvia Massy (Producer), Sylvia Massy (Engineer), Sylvia Massy (Mixing), Alan Moulder (Engineer), Alan Moulder (Mixing), Paul Northfield (Producer), Paul Northfield (Engineer), Paul Northfield (Mixing), Trent Reznor (Producer), Trent Reznor (Mixing), Sean Slade (Producer), Sean Slade (Engineer), Scott Wolfe (Producer), Scott Wolfe (Engineer), Scott Wolfe (Mixing), Dave Wyndorf (Producer), Dave Wyndorf (Mixing), Patricia Sullivan (Mastering), Greg Gordon (Engineer), Greg Gordon (Mixing Assistant), Richard Frankel (Art Direction), Richard Frankel (Design)
 
Wikipedia: S.F.W.
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S.F.W.
Directed by Jefery Levy
Produced by Mike Nelson
Dale Pollock
Sigurjon Sighvatsson
Written by Andrew Wellman (novel)
Danny Rubin (screenplay)
Jefery Levy (screenplay)
Starring Stephen Dorff
Reese Witherspoon
Jake Busey
Jack Noseworthy
Distributed by Gramercy Pictures
Release date(s) 1994
Running time 96 minutes
Language English

S.F.W. (or So Fucking What) is a 1994 film, directed by Jefery Levy. It is based on a novel by Andrew Wellman, and stars Stephen Dorff, Jake Busey and Reese Witherspoon, in one of her first lead roles.

Contents

Plot

Cliff Spab (Stephen Dorff) and his friend Joe Dice (Jack Noseworthy) go out one evening to buy some beer in a Los Angeles convenience store. While there, a group of masked and heavily armed terrorists take Cliff, Joe, and three other people hostage. The terrorists, who call themselves S.P.L.T. Image, have a video camera, and they tape their hostages. During the month-long standoff with the police, S.P.L.T. Image's only demand is that their broadcasts be televised on worldwide television live and uncut, or else the hostages will be killed. After two of the hostages are killed, Cliff, Joe and another hostage—a young teenage girl named Wendy Pfister (Reese Witherspoon)—are the only ones left. After 36 days, Cliff become indifferent to being killed, and he says repeatedly, "So fucking what?", in reply to his captors' threats to kill him. Because of the coverage, this makes Cliff a media icon.

The movie skips forward, picking up in the hospital. Cliff, we learn, had shot his way to freedom, at the cost of a bullet in his shoulder, and—more significantly—Joe's life. Despite Joe's death, Cliff is branded a hero for saving Wendy and killing all the terrorists. He's picked up from the hospital by his brother Scott (David Barry Gray) and taken home, where Cliff soon becomes uncomfortable. He does not appreciate either the reporters camped outside his front lawn, nor his parents, who welcome him home awkwardly. Cliff cannot stand the presence of his domineering father and weak-willed mother, and he flees their house. But on the street, he finds that his life cannot go back to what it was before the convenience store. His line—abbreviated as S.F.W.—is on banners, newspapers, CDs, and on billboard advertisements. At the fast food restaurant where he works, called Burger Boy, he finds his name and image on the board with a "Special 36¢ Cliff Spab Burger" being marketed in commemoration of his 36 days in captivity.

Cliff flees to the home of Joe's older sister Monica (Joey Lauren Adams), who tells Cliff that she resents that he has gotten all the media attention, whereas her brother, who got killed during the siege, has not gotten any sympathy or even attention from anyone. After spending a night of empty passion with Monica, Cliff leaves in the morning. Cliff calls upon his best friend Morrow Streeter (Jake Busey) to help him. Morrow takes Cliff to hide out in the elegant home of his sister Janet (Pamela Gidley), a lawyer who gives Cliff some advice. She advises that he should not pass up any opportunity to exploit his fame for personal gain. Alienated with life, Cliff leaves the following day by hitchhiking out of Los Angeles. He gets a ride with a disaffected couple who confide with him about their marital troubles; this inspires Cliff not to run from his problems since they will only follow him. Cliff decides to take advantage of his newfound fame, first by checking into a fancy hotel, and then holding press conferences, making public appearances, and holding autograph signings—all generally portraying him as a rebel.

But Cliff's real desire is to find Wendy, whom he also sees on the news. Wendy, however, is refusing to comment about the ordeal in the convenience store. Cliff eventually manages to track her down. Soon, a romantic attraction develops, but their relationship is hampered by reporters and paparazzi tailing both of them. One evening, Cliff slips out of his hotel room, meets with Wendy, and they travel to the location of the convenience store siege, where they find that the building has been closed down and boarded up as a crime scene. After reminiscing how he and Joe managed to overpower their captors, and killed all of them in a huge gunfight where Joe was killed and Cliff was wounded, Cliff then tells Wendy he only wishes that he could just give up all this fame and celebrity status so the two of them can have a quiet romantic life together.

A few days later, during a public appearance at a local high school, Cliff and Wendy arrive in the school auditorium to a cheering crowd of students. All of them are chanting Cliff's line, "So fucking what!", except for one distraught looking student. Her name is Barbara Wyler, nicknamed "Babs" (Amber Benson). Babs just sits silently, looking angry. She pushes her way through the crowd and points a gun at Cliff and Wendy on the stage and yells, "Everything matters!" Babs opens fire, seriously wounding both Cliff and Wendy. Media attention now switches to Babs Wyler, who is arrested, booked, and indicted for this crime. Her line of "Everything matters" becomes the new public catchphrase, replacing Cliff's "S.F.W." line. As reporters and media people talk about Babs' actions, the wounded Cliff and Wendy, now in the hospital, are relieved that their ordeal with the media is over, and they now can slip away to re-start their romance with their new found privacy.

Credits

Screenplay

Cast

  • Gary Grossman as Talent Agent
  • Michelle Seipp as Pamela, Hotel Receptionist
  • Frank Collison as Stoner Witness
  • Stephanie Friedman as Dori Smelling
  • Adam Small as Stan, Burger Boy Manager
  • Ben Slack as Madison Heights Mayor
  • Carol Hankins as Nervous Woman on Talkshow
  • Kristen Ernst as Teenage Girl on Talkshow
  • Mil Nicholson as Woman at Homecoming
  • Charles Font as Burger Boy Worker
  • John Chaidez as Burger Boy Worker
  • Corey Gunnestad as Burger Boy Worker
  • William Scott Brown as Reporter
  • Lisa Dinkins as Reporter
  • Amber Edam as Reporter
  • Jerome Front as Reporter
  • Susan Harney as Reporter
  • Philip Moon as Reporter
  • Joanne Takahashi as Reporter
  • R.W. Wilson as Reporter
  • Ada Gorn as Photographer
  • Jon Gudmundsson as Photographer
  • Bernadette Elise as Photographer
  • Gary Coleman as Himself
  • Lori Barbero as Herself (uncredited)
  • Kat Bjelland as Herself (uncredited)
  • Mike Breyer as Student (uncredited)
  • Alex Esta as Photographer (uncredited)
  • Maureen Herman as Herself (uncredited)

Soundtrack

Original Motion Picture Soundtrack was released on CD on September 27, 1994 by A&M.

It contains 13 tracks, with two of them, "S.F.W." and "Spab 'N' Janet Evening/The Green Room", being written especially for this movie:

  1. "Jesus Christ Pose" (Soundgarden) – 5:51
  2. "Get Your Gunn" (Marilyn Manson) – 3:19
  3. "Can I Stay?" (Pretty Mary Sunshine) – 3:04
  4. "Teenage Whore" (Hole) – 2:58
  5. "Negasonic Teenage Warhead" (Monster Magnet) – 5:00
  6. "Like Suicide (Acoustic Version)" (Chris Cornell) – 6:11
  7. "No Fuck'n Problem" (Suicidal Tendencies) – 3:31
  8. "Surrender" (Paw) – 3:56
  9. "Creep" (Radiohead) – 3:57
  10. "Two at a Time" (Cop Shoot Cop) – 4:01
  11. "Say What You Want" (Babes in Toyland) – 3:35
  12. "S.F.W." (GWAR) – 2:18
  13. "Spab 'N' Janet Evening/The Green Room" (Graeme Revell) – 2:56


The director had this to say: In a way this story parallels what happened to (Kurt) Cobain, says director Jefery Levy of his S.F.W. (So F -- -ing What). It's a movie about a regular kid (Stephen Dorff) with an extraordinary sensitivity. That's why Levy wanted to include Nirvana's All Apologies on the S.F.W. soundtrack and asked Cobain to screen a rough cut shortly before his suicide in April. Kurt really responded to the movie, says Levy, who has not yet been able to secure permission to include the song. Meanwhile, Levy is using Teenage Whore, a tune by Kurt's widow, Courtney Love, and her band, Hole. When she was responding (to Cobain's suicide note in a taped broadcast) she kept using the term 'So f -- -ing what', Levy recalls. It was weird.

See also

Similar era films and popular culture include:

External links


 
 
Learn More
Natasha Gregson Wagner (Actor, Drama/Horror)
Jack Noseworthy (Actor, Comedy/Drama)
Jake Busey (Actor, Comedy/Thriller)

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Copyrights:

Movies. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Movie Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Album Review. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "S.F.W." Read more

 

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