DVD - Pan & Scan Learn more
Enter a zip code
FOR PARENTS
Disc #1 -- Shut Up & Sing
1. Shut up and Sing [3:26]
2. Top of the World Tour 2003 [3:52]
3. The Comment [5:26]
4. Dixie Chicked [6:37]
5. The Long Way Around [8:33]
6. A Brief History [2:59]
7. Time for Family [7:08]
8. The Fallout [7:13]
9. FUTK [8:02]
10. Senate Committee Hearings [3:28]
11. The Home Front [4:51]
12. The New Album [3:47]
13. The Death Threat [7:32]
14. Rebirth [7:48]
15. Back on Tour [5:13]
16. End Credits [5:32]
This Chicks flick by Barbara Kopple (Academy Award winner for Harlan County, U.S.A.) and Cecilia Peck is powerful testament to the inconvenient truth that free speech can come at a very high cost. The Dixie Chicks, Texas-based and one of country music's most successful acts, found out just how costly it was in the weeks following a March 10, 2003, concert in London. Indulging in some between-song patter, singer Natalie Maines expressed shame that "the president of the United States is from Texas." In politics, as in comedy, timing is everything; and at the time, President George W. Bush's popularity among the Chicks' traditional country fans was sky-high, and the invasion of Iraq was imminent. Reaction was fast and furious. Country radio stations boycotted the Dixie Chicks' music. Conservative talk show hosts lambasted them. Country superstar Toby Keith got into the act by denigrating Maines in his concerts. People destroyed Dixie Chicks CDs in public protests that echoed the furor sparked by John Lennon's 1966 "We're more popular than Jesus now" comment. The trio’s tour had to be scaled back and rerouted to include friendlier climes (Canada). There were death threats. And there was, for the Chicks, solidarity. Shut Up & Sing is a backstage pass to witness a group at this career crossroads -- although it lives up to its title with plenty of concert and studio rehearsal footage as the group works on the Taking the Long Way album. It's too bad the film was completed before the album's unrepentant anthem, "Not Ready to Make Nice," earned record and song of the year honors at the February 2007 Grammy Awards, among the Chicks' five-Grammy haul. That would have given Shut Up & Sing a Hollywood ending one usually only sees in the movies. Donald Liebenson, Barnes & Noble
More reviews and recommendations
Several uses of "f--k" (about 12+), plus other language ("suck," "ass," "blow job," "s--t"); several shots of T-shirts reading "FUTK," which wearers explain variously.
The movie's thematic focus is on the band as a "brand," and on the commercial consequences of their changed status (e.g., Lipton tea wants to pull out of sponsoring their tour); images of and allusions to NPR, CNN, CBS, Guardian newspaper,... More
The movie's thematic focus is on the band as a "brand," and on the commercial consequences of their changed status (e.g., Lipton tea wants to pull out of sponsoring their tour); images of and allusions to NPR, CNN, CBS, Guardian newspaper, Lipton tea, Heineken, Burberry, Superbowl, Shepherd's Bush Stadium, Entertainment Weekly, Us Weekly, Starbucks, VH-1, Sony. Close
Footage is shown from a photo shoot for the Chicks' Entertainment Weekly cover, for which they appeared naked with controversial words painted on their bodies, indicating their sense of being censored by former fans and conservative radio h... More
Footage is shown from a photo shoot for the Chicks' Entertainment Weekly cover, for which they appeared naked with controversial words painted on their bodies, indicating their sense of being censored by former fans and conservative radio hosts/callers. Close
Death threats against the Chicks, including a specific date when Maines is threatened with being shot; film shows increased security provisions and the women's conversations about their fears.
Not an issue.
About Shut Up & Sing
Parents need to know that most teens probably won't be all that interested in this politically charged documentary, which is too bad, since it deals intelligently with mature themes like the debates over free speech and patriotism. That said, it also features repeated uses of "f--k" and other language (someone calls President Bush a "dumb f--k"). The Dixie Chicks face a death threat in Texas, as well as ugly language in protests (on the radio, in on-camera interviews, and spelled out on signs and T-shirts). The women appear in towels as they prepare for a photo shoot in which they pose naked (nothing graphic is shown) except for the words written on their bodies. Overall, the film offers a very sympathetic look at the Chicks, who are by turns funny, passionate, and determined to say what they mean, even when they're told to shut up. Some viewers might see this sympathy as political -- with a liberal slant.
Families can talk about the meaning of free speech, and whether that concept changes during wartime. Is it "unpatriotic" to criticize a president or a policy? How do the protests against the Dixie Chicks become personal? Is that fair, considering that they were the ones who made their personal opinions public? Since this movie is a documentary, should it be objective about the subject it's covering? Is it? Why or why not?