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Hated (1994) More at IMDbPro »
14 out of 17 people found the following comment useful :-

A Disturbing film about a disturbing man, 19 July 2000
Author: A-Ron-2 from Storrs, CT
GG Allin was easily one of the most unpleasant and untalented individuals in the annals of rock music. He was crude, violent and utterly insane. Seeing him live was more like seeing a side-show Geek than going to a show. He hurled feces, he assaulted the audience, he was usually beaten up or arrested before the show even started... yet, there will always be a certain part of me that will miss him.
GG was a force, a wild ride rather than an individual. He demonstrated a total lack of empathy for other human beings and I believe people who say that he probably would have been a serial killer if he had not become an 'artist.'
However, regardless of an of this, Todd Phillips documentary on the man is utterly brilliant. It passes no judgment on the man or his music, but documents a phenomenon. Phillips looks at GG with unflinching honesty and does not try to sugarcoat the reality of the disturbed individual who lashed out at the world around him.
If you have any interest in documentaries and how they SHOULD be done, look no farther than Hated, which is an honest and serious look at the psychopathology of one lone outsider.
10 out of 10 people found the following comment useful :-
okay, GG... we know!, 3 January 2001
Author: troy-32 from Chicago, Illinois
Of course, reading and hearing about GG Allin off and on for the past few years by people who had seen him on stage and then looking up stuff on GG on the Internet, I was very curious about him. "Hated" is ok, but not as exciting as I had hoped and GG Allin was not quite the outlaw that people thought. I think he was about 50% of the way there, but how interesting is it to watch someone repeatedly talk about how much he hates everybody and look at him smear himself with fresh poop? He probably did hate himself, and I would have been very interested into reasons, but everything the movie showed us of his nature was pretty superficial. I would have loved to have seen more interviews with people who had known him when he was younger, to have had more insight into him. After all, that's what's so compelling about people who will themselves into becoming sociopaths. He was undeniably a messed up guy, and I actually kind of liked him - he seemed very sad to me, and was probably had the potential to be a sensitive fellow. Not that he would have ever admitted to it. GG, not to mention his fans, did not have the interest or possibly the interpersonal intelligence to understand their drives. I think that GG Allin remains a fascinating subject, but this is a crude, uninformative look.
13 out of 16 people found the following comment useful :-

One-sided., 10 August 2005
Author: InjunNose from Alabama
First off, let me say that I found "Hated" to be a very entertaining film, and I believe that G.G. Allin was as legitimate an American folksinger as Leadbelly or Woody Guthrie(his material was more, ummm...specialized, but listen to 'Gypsy Motherf*cker', 'Liquor-Slicked Highway', or 'Shove That Warrant Up Your Ass' to get an idea of what I'm talking about). But rather than being a balanced portrait, "Hated" is largely a performance. Some people will just respond, "So?" after reading that. But it matters because this film takes itself soooooo seriously. There are serious moments in it, of course, but there's a lot of humor as well...and a lot of artifice on Allin's part. Did he have a horrible childhood? Yes, by all accounts. Was there a time when his onstage antics were more sincere than when "Hated" was filmed? Yes--just check out the archival footage of his spoken-word performance in Boston in 1988; he wasn't kidding around.(Actually, the excerpts featured in the film don't even reveal all of the embarrassing, frightening, and nakedly emotional moments of that performance...you'll have to track down a bootleg video or DVD to see the whole enchilada.) But why, at thirty-six or thirty-seven--when you're out of prison and looking relatively healthy, and you've achieved at least some level of notoriety--do you still feel the need to cut yourself, eat your own sh*t, and beat up your fans? (Okay, fine, he had some problems. So do most other people, but very few of them react to negative circumstances the way Allin did.) The answer is that G.G. Allin apparently DIDN'T want to do this anymore. Just before his death, according to biographer Joe Coughlin, Allin said that he wanted to retire from the punk scene and go into country music. And why not? When you're approaching forty, you simply can't withstand the kind of self-abuse that Allin's fans had come to expect. But he soldiered on for another couple of years, doing precisely what WAS expected of him, and he died because of it(if indirectly). G.G. Allin had a natural, genuine talent, but he painted himself into a corner pretty early on. He had a daughter, he was a fan of Captain Kangaroo, and at one point he had a damned fine singing voice. The monstrous character that he played--and sometimes became--was interesting, but it's a shame that "Hated" lets us see only that facet of his personality.
11 out of 13 people found the following comment useful :-
Long live the outlaw scumf**k, 1 December 2002
Author: Jake from Springfield, MO
GG was talentless , GG was insane , GG was disturbed..yep thats all true. The man had no talent (even though I have all his albums..funny stuff)..he was basically just this hateful defiant violent person that didn't give a damn about his life or anyone elses. Todd Phillips disturbing documentary takes us into his world of defiance and destruction. It features some insane characters besides GG ..like Dino the naked drummer who exposed himself to a little girl only to reply "I was just teasing her"..and Allin's weirdo brother Merle with his scary moustache. Includes some very sick scenes , but the most disturbing has got to be the final concert at the Gas Station in New York..it is undescrible but almost a chaotic barrage of nudity , rioting , violence , and a search for heroin that would kill him the next day. No one will ever hold a candle to this sick individual ..maybe thats a good thing
7 out of 8 people found the following comment useful :-

One of the best rock docos going!, 28 January 2005
Author: fertilecelluloid from Mountains of Madness
Is the GG Allin seen on-screen in this doco the "real" GG Allin? Frankly, THAT remains to be seen because GG on camera is a different GG to the guy who appeared occasionally at LA's Mondo-Video-A-Go-Go and shot the breeze with The Colonel, the store's proprietor.
The GG essayed on film by Todd Phillips is a force of angry nature, a punk with no discernible talent for music but a blazing talent for notoriety, anarchy and illegality.
What a true warts-and-all docu this is. Its jagged, freewheeling style perfectly mirrors the personal style of its fascinating subject. GG isn't likable in a standard way, but he's a damn courageous nutbag and intensely interesting for the angst he peddles.
Interviews with Deano (the naked drummer), brother Merle (with his Hitler moustache) and ex-members of GG's band, The Murder Junkies, are priceless. Also of bottomless merit is a wild clip where GG gets wasted, heads to a party and pays some skank to urinate into his mouth.
The concert footage is gold, and so is one live performance where a mean-spirited GG (is there any other kind?) slashes himself up and begs a female fan to finish the job. For her efforts, the fan cops a beating.
An interview with GG's old school principal, a vague ex-Hippie, is unforgettable.
One of the best rock docos going and entertaining from beginning to end.
Director Phillips, who also did the disturbing SCREWED, now directs Hollywood forgettables such as ROAD TRIP and OLD SCHOOL.
8 out of 10 people found the following comment useful :-
Excellent Documentary, 20 May 1999
Author: Voivod-2 from Berkeley, CA
Although he passed away in a typical rock star way (heroin overdose) in 1993, nothing else in GG's life could ever be considered typical. Yes, it is true that GG Allin makes Marilyn Manson look like a Sunday school teacher, but to focus on that is missing the point of this movie. As a fan of rock music, I can understand exactly where GG is coming from when he says that there is a great void in rock music today, that there is no soul behind the stars of the music industry. Where is the senseless destruction? Where is the violence? Where is the hyper-obscene sexuality that once offended legions of conservative suburbanites in the 1950's and 60's? Feeling that since he is the only one with the guts to do anything about it, GG took it upon himself to single-handedly compensate for all the boring cookie-cutter rock stars that anxiously collect royalty checks and live in $10 million mansions. GG willingly suffered to be a martyr for rock music, frequently going so far that once, warrants were out for his arrest in at least seven states at the same time! One scene that particularly hit me was this: GG is shown walking out of a court room after being handed down one of the many prison sentences he received in his life. As he walks by the camera, he exclaims triumphantly, "They're trying to destroy rock and roll but they CAN'T DO IT!" It is strange for me to admit that as a touching statement, especially when said by a man who is repeatedly shown sprawled out naked on stage, smothered in his own blood, urine, and feces, but at the same time, you wonder-- does anyone else out there in that nameless faceless monolith of rock give a damn about what they're doing enough to sacrifice their life for the name of it?
This movie is not for casual patrons of rock-- only a true lover of it will be able to transcend the gruesome, appetite-suppressing, often vomit-inducing qualities of the film. Endlessly fascinating, pathetic, disgusting, tragic, and perplexing, Hated is one the greatest rock documentaries ever made.
7 out of 9 people found the following comment useful :-
Revolting yet fascinating, 13 June 2001
Author: sick_boy420xxx (sick_boy420xxx@hotmail.com) from Buffalo, NY
GG Allin was truly something else. The man had no musical talent whatsoever, yet had probably one of the most loyal fan bases in rock music. This is despite the fact that he beat up, assaulted, and even raped audience members during concerts he gave...and more often than not ended up in jail because of it. His concerts were more of a war zone, filled with bodily fluid, violence, and musical assault. As a "fan", or more an observer of GG's music, I was quick to pick up this documentary about the man, and I must admit, I was thourougly impressed with it. It contains what probably are some of the most disturbing and utterly disgusting images I have ever seen. GG was known for performing shows naked, and defecating on stage...then rubbing the result all over himself. I can bet that most people would have a hard time watching a video of this event...which is shown here...and would find it hard to even imagine seeing GG in concert live. GG was also somewhat remembered as the guy who said he would commit suicide onstage for rock, only to die of a heroin overdose.
Overall, this film was a no holds barred look at the life of this infamous rock 'n' roll "legend", and one that was actually quite revealing into the how and whys of his life through interviews with him, friends, family, and fans. There is quite a few disturbing and absolutely disgusting images, including moments from live shows, as well as a scene a fan talks about with a camera there to document it. This particular scene is just beyond description...and as not to spoil it should you attempt to watch this film, I refuse to comment further.
GG was definitely one of the outlaws and revolutionaries in the rock and roll industry, paving the way for such artists as Marilyn Manson and others doing nasty things on stage and this documentary is worth it to see just what created this rock and roll myth and the "legend" behind it. Recommended, but be prepared for a lot of nastiness going in.
3 out of 4 people found the following comment useful :-

The best outlaw movie ever made!, 12 February 1999
Author: willy-41 from Oklahoma, USA
Hated is not a film for the weak, it follows GG Allin and the Murder Junkies as they put fear back into rock and roll. Spoken word performances with bananas, booze parties, naked concerts with lots of defacation and bloodshed, and even clips of one of the strangest funerals I have ever seen. Great interviews with fans, old teachers, childhood friends, and GG's brother Merle. If you are a fan of outrageous music or punk rock you must see this.
1 out of 1 people found the following comment useful :-

Enough to frighten the viewer right back to their Bing Crosby records, 27 December 2006
Author: TimothyFarrell from Worcester, MA
G.G. Allin died of a heroin overdose in 1993. What a typical death for such an untypical rock 'n' roller. Often when watching extreme cinema, you can relax by reassuring yourself its only a movie. This isn't the case with this documentary. G.G. Allin was completely real, completely derange, and oddly compelling. You can get a glimpse of him in this student film, feces and all. G.G. has become a legend not because of his music (which was amusing but pretty crappy) but because of his transgressive stage antics. Unlike other shock-rockers such as Marilyn Manson, G.G. Allin was the real thing. He was one disturbed, messed-up individual witness by the interviews caught on camera. Hes by far one of the most misanthropic individuals out there and (depending on your definition) possibly the living embodiment of the punk rock lifestyle.
"Hated" is a bit one-sided, but gives the viewer a good idea just why the man is one of underground music's most infamous participants. G.G.'s stage act would often involve performing completely nude (the man had a disgustingly small endowment), eating ex-lax and rubbing his feces all over himself, shoving the microphone up a certain orifice, and many other shocking acts along the lines. The documentary captures him in all his, err, glory. I wouldn't in my right mind recommend this to most people, but for those interested in the fringes of culture with a strong stomach, it carries interest. One thing for sure, there's never going to be another G.G. He's enough to frighten the viewer right back to their Bing Crosby records. (6/10)
2 out of 3 people found the following comment useful :-

Hated is not for the weak minded., 8 October 2004
Author: Reuben Sala (ReubenSala@yahoo.com) from Covington, Washington
Warning: This Documentary contains images that are NOT to be taken lightly with children under the age of 16.
Hated has to be my favorite music documentary of all time, I can watch it and be mesmerized by the "Raw, Brutal, Rough and Bloody" feeling I get while watching G.G. Allin. This documentary just follows around G.G. Allin and talks about his life growing up and it also has some people doing interviews, not a lot, but the thing that got me on the DVD version was the last performance he got to do before he died. It was disgusting to say the least, but you don't go to a punk show for the cool lights and watching your favorite band steal the hearts of their teeny bopper fans and bang the hell out of them.
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