Recorded at the Brixton Academy on the band’s 25th anniversary, this DVD preserves the evening’s entire 23-song set, complete with oodles of special guests.
Directed by Francis Ford Coppola’s son Roman, it’s the tale of a milquetoast film editor living in 1969 Paris who’s working on the fictional film, Dragonfly.
Before black depression poet extraordinaire Dax Riggs sobbed so eloquently for Agents of Oblivion or Dead Boy and the Elephantmen, he screamed for Acid Bath.
There are three DVDs here. The first two are the original 12 episodes, and, as much fun as it is, watching a whole DVD’s worth in one sitting is grueling.
It could be a tale of visionary performance artists capitalizing on the body taboos of modern culture. Maybe it’s a couple of guys playing with their dicks.
After escaping capture in Part II, Angela (played by Bruce Springsteen’s sister, Pamela) continues her role as Angela Baker, the transsexual psychopath.