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*The film is dedicated to ], who committed ] not long after being interviewed. *The film is dedicated to ], who committed ] not long after being interviewed.
*It uses the word "fuck" ever made. *It uses the word "fuck" ever made.
*It uses the eponymous word 629 times over 93 minutes, for a total of 6.76 uses per minute. *It uses the ] word 629 times over 93 minutes, for a total of 6.76 uses per minute.
*] provided the animated segues for the film. *] provided the animated segues for the film.
*The film contains a painting (United States Censorship) by Canadian political artist Charles Alexander Moffat. *The film contains a painting (United States Censorship) by Canadian political artist Charles Alexander Moffat.

Revision as of 21:24, 15 October 2006

2005 film
Fuck
The movie that dare not speak its name.
Directed bySteve Anderson
Produced bySteve Anderson
CinematographyAndre Fontanelle
Music byCarvin Knowles
Distributed byTHINKfilm
Release datesNovember 7, 2005
Running time93 min.
LanguageEnglish
For the 1969 film by Andy Warhol, see Blue Movie.

Fuck (sometimes titled as F* or The "F" Word) is a 2005 documentary by director/producer Steve Anderson about the social, political, personal, historical, linguistic and artistic significance of the word fuck. It features commentary by a variety of individuals, including linguists, comics, musicians, filmmakers, authors, porn stars, politicians, and media personalities as well as clips from George Carlin, Scarface, Country Joe and the Fish's Woodstock performance, President George W. Bush's one-fingered salute to a camera, various Lenny Bruce performances, U2's Golden Globe acceptance, Paul Robert Cohen's protest and Nipplegate. The movie was shown for the first time on November 7 2005 at the AFI Film Festival, but the theatrical release for the USA is planned for November 10 2006.

Trivia

  • The film is dedicated to Hunter S. Thompson, who committed suicide not long after being interviewed.
  • It uses the word "fuck" more times than any movie ever made.
  • It uses the eponymous word 629 times over 93 minutes, for a total of 6.76 uses per minute.
  • Bill Plympton provided the animated segues for the film.
  • The film contains a painting (United States Censorship) by Canadian political artist Charles Alexander Moffat.

Interviewees

See also

References

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