"The Dirt", based on the band's best-selling
autobiography, charts the rise of four Californian youngsters
who channel the punk rage of the 1970s into the big-haired rock
genre that, for many people, defined the 1980s.
Like the hugely successful Queen movie "Bohemian Rhapsody", it
is a rags-to-riches tale of flamboyant showbiz glory and the
perils of a rock 'n' roll lifestyle.
"I think that's what's exciting for people about the Queen
movie: there’s a band who wrote their own music, they were their
own personalities and they lived their life the way they lived
their life," Motley Crue founder Nikki Sixx told Reuters.
"It's the same for Motley Crue."
The film begins with a neglected young Sixx being taken into
care after cutting his own arm and blaming it on his drunkard
mother - setting up a theme of self-abuse that runs through a
story where Jack Daniels flows like water and anything sniffable
goes up the musicians' noses.
A stand-out scene is when Motley Crue are touring with Ozzy
Osbourne who, when he discovers they have no spare cocaine to
give him, crouches down and snorts a line of live ants from the
floor.
"It was somebody that we looked up to, and still look up to, who
was wild, and we were a wild young band," Sixx said. "We thought
we could compete with that, but you can't with Ozzy, he won!"
While viewers will draw inevitable comparisons to the 1984 heavy
metal mockumentary "This Is Spinal Tap", Sixx said he hoped "The
Dirt" had some of the emotional heft and "graininess" of "Boogie
Nights" or even "Goodfellas".
"Everyone thinks that Motley Crue glamorized drugs and sex –
well that's not true," said Allen Kovac, the band's manager and
one of the film's producers.
"The Beatles glamorized LSD ... Keith Richards glamorized
heroin. What we wanted to do is to deglamorize it – show what
can happen to people, their families, their friends. And I think
accomplishing that ... took courage by the band."
"The Dirt" is released on Netflix on March 22.
(Writing by Robin Pomeroy; Editing by Kirsten Donovan)
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