Super Duper Alice Cooper

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From Banger Films, the creators of Iron Maiden: Flight 666 and Rush: Beyond The Lighted Stage, comes Super Duper Alice Cooper the story of Vincent Furnier, the preacher's son who struck fear into the hearts of parents everywhere as Alice Cooper, the most outrageous rock star of his generation. This unique doc opera, a dizzying blend of documentary archive footage, animation and rock opera goes from the early days of Alice as the frontman for a cutting edge rock band in the sixties through the hazy decadence of global celebrity in the seventies and on to his winking comeback as the glam metal godfather in the eighties. This is the tale of Alice and Vincent battling for each other's souls. Super Duper Alice Cooper combines audio interviews with a wealth of archive Alice Cooper footage covering concerts, TV appearances, movie cameos, dramatic headlines and magazine spreads. All the highlights of his career are covered aided by contributions from some of the biggest music icons of all time including Iggy Pop, Elton John, John Lydon, Bernie Taupin, Dee Snider and of course Alice Cooper himself. This is the definitive, extraordinary story of the man and the myth that is uniquely Alice Cooper. (Eagle Rock Entertainment)

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Othello 

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English Compared to the utterly useless documentary God Bless Ozzy Osbourne, Super Duper Alice Cooper has one major bonus, which is how it maps the musical underground of the late sixties and early seventies, in which I was almost surprised at how unconventional Alice Cooper sounded at the time, even if they ended up moving into the primitive eighties hey hey rock (though I have to admit that "I'm Eighteen" is the bomb). And yet the mere glimpse of a time when the ugliest men in the world were boredly ripping apart the prettiest girls west of the Mississippi is actually satisfaction enough to justify watching incompetent and not particularly interesting alcoholics robbing their mothers' closets. The documentary itself undermines any credibility with horrible montages of photographs, as if the filmmakers had just discovered some new editing program, and we can only speculate whether the things we see in the photographs were actually happening when it was taken, given such a manipulated result; still, it is gratifying to learn from the filmmakers that by '83 the character of Alice Cooper had ceased to be of any interest, even though he continues to perform with success to this day. In doing so, they subtly reveal that the whole 80s musical storm was not only visually but also musically a total sham. If only the same could finally reach all the filthy Queens. ()

angel74 

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English I've never seen a music documentary as riveting as this. Alice Cooper is an incredible artist! It boggles my mind that he managed to survive all the madness he experienced. And as if that wasn't enough, he currently ranks among the biggest laid-back rock personalities I know. Vincent Furnier has my great admiration and respect. Hats off to his indomitable will to follow his dream. (100%) ()

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