Documentary about the life and death of the notorious underground punk icon GG Allin, the foul mouthed, heroin shooting lead singer of the Murder Junkies, who would throw excrement at the crowd, start fights with the biggest guys in the audience, and threatened to kill himself onstage. He was considered the lowest common denominator of our society by some, an avant-garde artist by others. He died of an overdose in the early 90’s. —IMDb
Todd Phillips (born December 20, 1970) is an American screenwriter and film director. He is best known for directing the comedy films Road Trip, Old School, The Hangover, and Due Date.
His first film was the feature-length documentary Hated: GG Allin and the Murder Junkies, about the life and death of punk rocker GG Allin. Phillips made the film while a junior at NYU and it went on to become one of the biggest grossing student films at the time, even getting a limited theatrical release.Phillips followed up Junkies with Frat House, a documentary about college fraternities that he produced and directed with then-partner, Andrew Gurland. Frat House premiered at the 1998 Sundance Film Festival and would win the Grand Jury Prize for documentary features. It was produced by HBO, but never aired on its channel because many of the film’s participants were paid to re-enact their activities.
Phillips’ documentary film, Bittersweet Motel centered on the jam band Phish. It covered… read more
GG Allin ciertamente es un tema interesante, no para uno sino para varios documentales. Extrañamente lo que puede ser considerado como una de sus debilidades también es una de sus más grandes fortalezas puesto que Todd Phillips básicamente siguió a Allin y su banda sin intervenir demasiado. Pero desde el punto de vista documental si hubiese sido genial tener la opinión de otros músicos o "expertos".