Skinhead attitude

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Movie
German title Skinhead attitude
Original title Skinhead attitude
Country of production Switzerland , France , Germany
original language German , English
Publishing year 2003
length 90 minutes
Age rating FSK 16
Rod
Director Daniel Schweizer
script Daniel Schweizer
production Valentin Greutert , Annette Pisacane , Samir
music Peter Bräker
camera Denis Jutzeler
cut Kathrin Plüss
occupation

Skinhead Attitude is a documentary by Daniel Schweizer from the year 2003 , which deals with the skinhead - subculture busy.

content

The French-Swiss co-production accompanies the 22-year-old Renee (a common term in the skinhead scene for female skinheads) Karole on a journey through various European cities and through the USA and Canada, where she meets with members of the scene and also goes to concerts. The music of the skinheads attracts a lot of attention in the film. Musicians like Laurel Aitken , Bad-Manners- Frontmann Buster Bloodvessel and German groups like Scrapy have their say. They report on the prejudices against skins, which are perceived by the public as racists and violent criminals. The conflict between right-wing and anti-racist skins is highlighted. Confessing neo-Nazi skinheads are also mentioned; Neutral and left-wing skinheads do not regard these as members of the scene, but rather derogate them as boneheads (Roddy Moreno, singer of the Welsh Oi! band The Oppressed , comments in the documentary as follows: “ No skin can be racist because it is otherwise its black roots are denied ”). Such a group meets Swiss in Sweden and later in the film in the USA. The film ends with a view of the murder of two anti-racist skinheads by right-wing extremists in Las Vegas.

Recognitions

The film was nominated for the German Television Award 2005 in the category “Best Documentary”.

Web links