The F Word

2005

Action / Drama

2
Rotten Tomatoes Critics - Certified Fresh 79%
Rotten Tomatoes Audience - Upright 79% · 500 ratings
IMDb Rating 6.3/10 10 495 495

Plot summary

A frustrated radio DJ takes to the streets of Manhattan during the Republican National Convention after the FCC has slapped his station with $1 million in indecency fines, and popular radio personality Joe Pace (Josh Hamilton) isn't going down without a fight. As the streets fill with restless republicans, angry protestors, and other colorful characters, Joe arms himself with a wireless microphone and a portable transmitter in order to get the opinions of the average person on the street.

Director

Top cast

Sam Rockwell as Jeremy
Yul Vazquez as Luis
Zak Orth as Manny
Josh Hamilton as Joe Pace
720p.BLU 1080p.BLU
704.98 MB
1280*714
English 2.0
NR
23.976 fps
1 hr 16 min
Seeds ...
1.42 GB
1920*1072
English 5.1
NR
23.976 fps
1 hr 16 min
Seeds ...

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by catholiclonnie 9 / 10

One "F" Word

I just kinda fell into watching the movie while scrolling through the channels. I always seem to find amazing movies on the good Ole IFC. It brought one other "F" word to mind FANTASTIC! Charles Bukowski always used the F word just perfectly and in the right context. This film did that too. I found myself thinking that it was an actual Documentary. I am figuring that was the whole idea. Well Done. Josh Hamilton did a great job mixing in the actors and the actual protesters. A must see. Especially en light of the upcoming elections. Great work from Director and writer Jed Weintrob. Pure genius on his part, great characters, great mix of actors and actual protesters, wonderful display of emotion, and ideas.
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Reviewed by aubrey-clark 7 / 10

An attempt to say things not yet said

I watched this film the same day I watched a documentary on the Red Sox, both off of IFC. I felt as though I had watched the same film twice. They are both primarily about divisive fans rooting fervently but in vain for their team to win.

I was moderately impressed with the willingness of The F Word to include other political fields of thought in its discussion. At one point a journalist, republican and former Marine arrives on scene and tours part of Manhattan with the lead character. His view is fairly simple. Most of these protesters are here because disliking Bush is popular. It is easier to have an emotional investment in something than an intellectual one (ask any sports fan). As another minor character reminds us, it is not likely many of them have a nuanced understanding of things like foreign policy.

I did not appreciate the Waking Life-style digression of the park dream sequence. It felt too digressive.

The various 'We Hate Bush' posters and sentiments flood the screen as often as "Yankees Suck" shirts flood the Red Sox documentary. This is to be expected of a film about protesters of the RNC, but there seems to be little attempt on the part of the filmmakers to explore the specific political positions of these people, and so we are left with the sense that the majority of them are passionate lemmings. This was possibly the intent of the creators, but I am uncertain. Unfortunately, personal politics, like the home team mentality, tends to skew ones interpretation of things, and The F Word makes little attempt to clarify anything. Which is why I give it a 7/10.

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