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Supersonic

Supersonic chronicles Oasis's meteoric ascent from Manchester's council estates to the era's biggest concerts in a mere three years. This tangible, unvarnished, and emotionally resonant documentary illuminates one of the most genre- and generation-defining British bands of all time, and features candid new interviews with Noel and Liam Gallagher, their mother, and members of the band and the road crew.

Director(s)

Phil Smith

Mat Whitecross

Cast & Crew

Liam Gallagher

Liam Gallagher

Self

Noel Gallagher

Noel Gallagher

Self

Paul Arthurs

Paul Arthurs

Self (as Bonehead)

Alan McGee

Alan McGee

Self

Mat Whitecross

Mat Whitecross

-

Paul Gallagher

Paul Gallagher

Self

Peggy Gallagher

Peggy Gallagher

Self

Tony McCarroll

Tony McCarroll

Self

Christine Biller

Christine Biller

Self

Debbie Turner

Debbie Turner

Self (as Debbie Ellis)

Paolo Hewitt

Paolo Hewitt

Self

Owen Morris

Owen Morris

-

Maggie Mouzakitis

Maggie Mouzakitis

Self

Jason Rhodes

Jason Rhodes

Self

Phil Smith

Phil Smith

-

Marcus Russell

Marcus Russell

Self

Daniela Soave

Daniela Soave

Self

Details

GenresMusic, Documentary, History
Runtime1h 57 mins
Released on02 Oct 2016
Languageen
Produced InUnited Kingdom
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Reviews

CinemaSerf

7/10

You see so many of these musical biopics that are clearly just manufactured by record companies and/or the acts to create some publicity and squeeze an extra bit of juice from their back catalogues. That cannot be said of this way more visceral film that takes us from the origins of “Oasis” as two brothers and their pals rehearing relentlessly in a basement through to global stardom. Neither Noel nor Liam Gallagher pull their punches as their evaluations of not just their own turbulent relationship, but of a grasping and manipulative industry and of the hilarious degree of hypocrisy that prevailed as these struggled to attain success before struggling even more with it’s consequences, play out. The band, their manager Alan McGee alongside their dedicated and long-suffering team and the press at the time offer us as honest an appraisal as you’ll ever see - and these brothers appear unconcerned that at times they come across as obnoxious, drug-infused, prats. Indeed, it’s that very honesty that, augmented by an astonishing selection of archive with some really decent audio, gives this whole thing an authenticity that makes it a compelling watch. Musically, it serves as a reminder of just how extensive that back catalogue is, and at just how international their success was - despite their much publicised peccadilloes, antics and hotel-room-trashing. Also, it takes a look at just how relationships inside and outside the band thrived and suffered across this relatively short but hugely intense timeframe, and many of those incidents are well documented for us to watch, wince and wave at. The narration comes from these characters directly, either by way of sound bites or from contemporary interviews and so, again, the whole thing smacks of something real. Like them or loathe them, it’s not possible to be bored by them.

All Trailers

Official Trailer
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