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Fuck
Directed by
Steve Anderson
R
2005
1h 33m
Documentary
7.0
56%
67%
Add to Watchlist
A documentary on the expletive's origin, why it offends some people so deeply, and what can be gained from its use.
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Cast of Fuck
Reinhold Aman
Self
Steven Bochco
Self
Pat Boone
Self
Ben Bradlee
Self
Drew Carey
Self
Chuck D
Self
Billy Connolly
Self
John Crossley
Self
Sam Donaldson
Self
Janeane Garofalo
Self
Ice-T
Self
Bill Maher
Self
Timothy Jay
Self
Ron Jeremy
Self
Alan Keyes
Self
Janet LaRue
Self
Dave Marsh
Self
Judith Martin
Self
Michael Medved
Self
David Milch
Self
Alanis Morissette
Self
Geoffrey Nunberg
Self
Jim O'Connor
Self
Tera Patrick
Self
Robert W. Peters
Self
Spyder Jonez
Self
David Shaw
Self
David Skover
Self
Kevin Smith
Self
Hunter S. Thompson
Self (archive footage)
Sandra Tsing Loh
Self
Michelle Krusiec
Jane
Steve Anderson
Dick
Andre Fontanelle
Bartender
Dennis Prager
Self
Eddie Murphy
Self (archive footage) (uncredited)
Frank Zappa
Self (archive footage)
Fuck Reviews
Chicago Reader
Jonathan Rosenbaum
If you're wondering how Steve Anderson managed to make a 93-minute documentary about the ultimate four-letter word, which uses the epithet over 800 times, you're underestimating his capacity to entertain and educate in roughly equal doses.
Austin Chronicle
Marjorie Baumgarten
... manages to strip some of the mystique from the forbidden word, and in the end, despite some road bumps, is a satisfying film.
Seattle Times
Moira MacDonald
But F*** gives short shrift to a question that many moviegoers may well ponder: How, exactly, has this word become a substitute for wit, or, in many movies, for dialogue?
Arizona Republic
Christy Lemire
F--- branches out into a discussion of decency, ranging from David Caruso's bare butt on "NYPD Blue" to Janet Jackson's Super Bowl wardrobe malfunction. At this point, the movie has lost its initial focus.
Washington Post
Stephen Hunter
... It's a mere 90-some minutes long; it only feels like seven hours.
Newsday
John Anderson
Penetrating, revelatory, thought-provoking and entertaining.
AV Club
Noel Murray
The movie doesn't add much to the culture wars, beyond histrionics from a lot of people who take their causes too f***ing seriously.
San Francisco Chronicle
Mick LaSalle
Tried and true bad arguments are advanced.
Boston Globe
Wesley Morris
Anderson's glib approach is to the movie's advantage, allowing anything profound to seem unexpected.
Los Angeles Times
Carina Chocano
As funny and cathartic as the word it celebrates, and nearly as perversely shock-happy.
Entertainment Weekly
Lisa Schwarzbaum
Everyone uses the four-letter word, not many publications (including EW) print it: That's one marketing hook for this goofily overproduced, frivolous documentary.
Boxoffice Magazine
Tim Cogshell
... it seems like a real neat way to get that word onto movie posters and into lots of movie reviews all over America, thus vexing arbiters of taste and propriety with at least some measure of academic credibility.
New York Times
A.O. Scott
Steve Anderson's rowdy and contentious new documentary pits the upholders of propriety against the proponents of free expression in a battle over just one word.
Chicago Sun-Times
Bill Stamets
Far smarter fun with filth, though, can be found in The Aristocrats.
The Hollywood Reporter
Frank Scheck
Proving that any subject is grist for the current documentary mill, Steve Anderson's film provides a comprehensive portrait of the expletive that some people find gravely offensive and that others find to be one of the most wonderful and versatile words.
Chicago Tribune
Michael Phillips
The film works best when widening its focus to include the Federal Communications Commission's often baffling and hypocritical stances regarding what's OK to say, or show, on TV and radio, and what isn't.
New York Daily News
Jack Mathews
90 minutes is too much time to devote to a four-letter word, even one with as many diverse uses and conjugations as this one.
Salon.com
Andrew O'Hehir
It's going to be an entertaining and successful big-city date movie, let's say that. But it's essentially a mishmash of random ingredients, not very systematically presented and skewed to flatter its audience's presumed enlightenment.
New York Post
Lou Lumenick
Rarely has a documentary been so pleased with itself -- with so little justification -- as Steve Anderson's repetitive and unenlightening F - - k.
Village Voice
Rob Nelson
Twelve-year-olds might get a charge out of this purportedly daring documentary celebration of the F-word, although it never occurs to filmmaker Steve Anderson that it might be fun or even genuinely lewd to interview kids on the subject.
Watch Fuck Videos
F Ck
F Ck
Trailer
F Ck Scene: First Amendment
F Ck Scene: First Amendment
Scene
F Ck Scene: What The F-Word Means
F Ck Scene: What The F-Word Means
Scene
F Ck Scene: Politics Of The F-Word
F Ck Scene: Politics Of The F-Word
Scene
F Ck Scene: The F-Word In The Movies
F Ck Scene: The F-Word In The Movies
Scene
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