DVD - Wide Screen / Dolby 5.1 / Stereo Learn more
Enter a zip code
FOR PARENTS
Widescreen version of the film; 5.1 Dolby Digital and DTS Surround Sound; Filmmaker commentary; Deleted scenes with filmmaker commentary; Original feature-length documentary: "Whether You Like It or Not: The Story of Hedwig"; Select-a-song: song-by-song access to the film; Cast and crew filmographies; Theatrical trailer; Interactive menus; DVD-ROM content: original theatrical website
Full Product DetailsSide #1 --
0. Select a Scene
1. America the Beautiful [1:05]
2. Tear Me Down [3:59]
3. Vitzhak [2:37]
4. St. Louis [4:42]
5. East Berlin 1968 [1:08]
6. Origin of Love [5:35]
7. The Wild Side [4:20]
8. Menses Fair [2:11]
9. Luther and Gummy Bears [2:29]
10. Sugar Daddy [2:10]
11. Cut and Paste [1:10]
12. Angry Inch [3:47]
13. Freedom [2:33]
14. Wig in a Box [5:14]
15. Mall Appearance [3:14]
16. Tommy Speck [3:21]
17. Wicked Little Town [4:09]
18. Knowledge [4:10]
19. Love is Immortal [7:06]
20. "I'm Going to Guam" [3:06]
21. Reunion [4:56]
22. Hedwig's Lament/Exquisite Corpse [3:49]
23. Wicked Little Town (Tommy Gnosis Version) [3:25]
24. Midnight Radio [:32]
25. Origin of Love [5:13]
26. Wig in a Box/End Credits [2:06]
John Cameron Mitchell's thundering, intelligent psycho-comic essay on the creation and deconstruction of a pop persona is the best transvestite rock opera this side of The Rocky Horror Picture Show. Based on Mitchell and Stephen Trask's Off-Broadway musical, the film is a reminiscence of the familial and sexual trauma that drove a young German boy to a sex-change operation gone horribly, hilariously wrong. As an adult American divorcée, Hedwig hits the road with her band, chasing down her rock-god ex-boyfriend from one town to the next. The ex plays the stadiums; Hedwig and her band play the dumps. On film, the songs -- vivid refractions of Roxy Music and The Rocky Horror Picture Show, among others, composed by Stephen Trask -- still work overtime to carry the story engine. Mitchell constructs plush visual interiors to illustrate the tunes, with help from dreamy, semi-connected animated interludes by Emily Hubley. Ultimately, Hedwig, with its keen, flashback-fueled grace, could be termed the rock flick's Citizen Kane -- and that's an overstatement you can flick your Bic to. Barnes & Noble
More reviews and recommendations
Frequent profanity -- mostly "f--k." One instance of "c---t" and "faggot."
Main characters drink frequently. Some peripheral smoking.
Lots of sexually suggestive content -- from clothing, to dancing, to plain sexual tension. All this is kicked up a notch because of the gender-bending issues. Nude male buttocks. One scene, under sheets, of main character thrusting into ano... More
Lots of sexually suggestive content -- from clothing, to dancing, to plain sexual tension. All this is kicked up a notch because of the gender-bending issues. Nude male buttocks. One scene, under sheets, of main character thrusting into another character from behind. Close
One semi-humorous restaurant brawl scene triggered by a hate word. Emotional cruelty. Some mild pushing. News footage of people running across East Berlin border and getting hurt.
About Hedwig and The Angry Inch
Parents need to know that the main character in this energetic musical is a man who has undergone a botched sex change operation and lives life as a sort of drag queen rock star. Sexual dancing, innuendo, profanity, and tension thread through the entire film, including discussion of prostitution and oral sex. One scene includes brief, loveless intercourse where bodies are covered by a sheet, and another indicates an offscreen sexual act involving a hand. A couple scenes show male nudity from behind, and one segment shows illustrations of naked, non-sexual men and women.