Repo Man is coming out on Blu-ray but not here in the United States. Why?
AC: Universal Studios has an antipathy towards Repo Man and towards Walker. I don't think they will ever bring out a good version in the US. I can't understand why Universal won't do a sequel given how much money they made off the original Repo Man. It's an institutional animus. The kinds of people that get jobs in studios tend to be fearful of their superiors and that's how they keep their jobs. The guys at Universal, even though they were 13 when Repo Man came out, they've been told by their superiors: 'We don't like that film'. And that's the official attitude from generation to generation in the studio. They have an institutional animus which almost makes you think that corporations really could be people
Then there's the crisis of getting rights from studios.
AC: It's so corrupt. Now they want to have longer copyright periods because they say the young artists are relying on this money. The young artists never see any money because they sign away that money to big media corporations, like Universal and Viacom. We, the artists, lose all of our rights to these massive corporations, who then come down heavy on these kids for downloading films and music that we never see a penny from. It's complete bull@!$%#. I want to encourage your audience to go and pirate a bunch of my stuff right away.

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- Public Discussion (5)
Taking place amid an estranged world, numb with fear of nuclear annihilation, Repo Man is a beautifully apocalyptic fairy tale of rebellion, desperation and escape during a time when we thought we were going to blow it all up or, at least, snort it all up. In an era of New Wave fashion and music consumed via MTV, the movie boasted a punk-driven soundtrack (Black Flag, The Circle Jerks, Fear, Iggy Pop) which counteracted the pop aesthetic of the 1980s, delivering an unsettling and doomed vision of the youth and their future.
Repo Man is released on Blu-ray in the UK this week. However, thanks to the great bureaucracy of the American film establishment - Universal Studios to be exact - the idea of a US release hasn't even batted a lash. According to Alex Cox, "It's an institutional animus" - an institutionalized corporation of drones fearful of losing their jobs.
- 2 votes
Taking place amid an estranged world, numb with fear of nuclear annihilation, Repo Man is a beautifully apocalyptic fairy tale of rebellion, desperation and escape during a time when we thought we were going to blow it all up or, at least, snort it all up.
Hmm. Never seen it and incredibly, it's playing tonight and I think later this month. Worth checking out?
: We were going to do it super low budget with all four members of Fear, but it never came about.
That sounds nuts.
- 4 votes
While not the greatest film in the world, it is one that's worth seeing. It certainly came from a different place than the teen waffle that was hitting the market at the time.
- 3 votes
The film sucks. What a waste of time and money putting it on Blu-Ray.
- 1 vote
I liked the film and watched it again not long ago. Have it on VHS & DVD, but wouldn't bother with blu-ray. The soundtrack is awesome, have the album & CD.
- 1 vote
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