Totally F***ed Up Reviews (original) (raw)

Summary Six queer teenagers struggle to get along with each other and with life in the face of varying obstacles.

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Summary Six queer teenagers struggle to get along with each other and with life in the face of varying obstacles.

The total lack of pity and condescension carries the film over its rough spots and aimless patches. The endings of the director’s Teen Apocalypse Trilogy (of which Totally F***ed Up is the first part) may seem utterly desolating, yet they all move toward a rejection of negativism in favor of the harsh but inescapable complexities of the world. Life is f***ked up, Araki is saying, but it is worth living.

Araki's self-described “guerrilla” style of filmmaking has just the right edge here, yet is polished enough not to distract. In this respect, Totally F***ed Up is a much better film than Araki's last effort, The Living End. Although the teenaged ennui in the film sometimes comes off as hip nihilism, there's no question that the pain and turmoil depicted is anything but heartfelt.

A soap for the slack generation, that'll strike a chord way outside the confines of the New Queer Cinema.

This feisty, disjointed film finds something compelling in its characters even when they're so druggy they can barely stand.

This ultra-low-budget, Godardian "homo movie" feels like a step backward to his earlier group mopes rather than an advance beyond his provocative last film, The Living End.

There's no escaping the teen angst or, for that matter, Araki's thumping message with the angry director managing to slip the odd political curve-ball into proceedings as if he's been watching too many Oliver Stone movies.

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Production Company Blurco, Desperate Pictures, Muscle + Hate Studios

Release Date Oct 10, 1993

Duration 1 h 18 m

Rating Unrated