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Closed Caption; Origional theatrical trailer; English: stereo surround; English, french & spanish language subtitles
Full Product DetailsSide #1 --
1. Day 36/Main Title [6:54]
2. Survivor [4:43]
3. Freedom [4:59]
4. Home, Sweet Home [6:09]
5. Wendy [5:30]
6. Nobody [7:39]
7. Perceptions [5:47]
8. So F&*%ing What? [9:22]
9. Not Afraid to Die [1:22]
10. Lawyer Talk [7:22]
11. On the Run [5:04]
12. Media Madness [6:58]
13. Spab Speaks Out [4:19]
14. Icon [4:53]
15. Reunited [5:10]
16. Switch/End Credits [8:59]
Embracing the supposed nihilism and cynicism of the "slacker" generation, S.F.W. (1995) caused nary a blip on the media-saturated cultural radar screen that it criticized. Stephen Dorff stars as Cliff Spab, an aimless, hard-drinking youth. Spab becomes a national hero when he is one of several people held hostage by gun-toting terrorists in a convenience store. He doesn't care much about his own life or anything else, and his attitude of "So f---ing what?" translates into debates with his terrorist captors and gloomy pronouncements that charm viewers. After a month-long siege, a crisis erupts when the store runs out of beer and junk food, so Cliff finds himself a free man whose celebrity image is emblazoned on t-shirts and whose presence is requested at a rock concert where he is required to do nothing other than appear. In the meantime, Spab's girlfriend Wendy (Reese Witherspoon) becomes a ubiquitous talk show guest. Ostensibly a satire of the celebrity-obsessed culture of the 1990s, the film was withheld from distribution for a year because of thematic similarities to Oliver Stone's Natural Born Killers (1994). Karl Williams, All Movie Guide