
Release Date:
August 26, 2011 (SF; NY & LA release: Sept. 16)
Studio:
Tribeca Film
Director:
Matthew Bate
Screenwriter:
Matthew Bate
Starring:
Eddie Lee Sausage, Mitch Deprey, Raymond Huffman, Peter Haskett
Genre:
Documentary
MPAA Rating:
Not Available
Official Website:
ShutUpLittleManfilm.com
Review:
Not Available
DVD Review:
Not Available
DVD:
Not Available
Movie Poster:
View here
Production Stills:
View here
Plot Summary:
In 1987, Eddie and Mitch, two young punks from the Midwest, moved into a low-rent tenement apartment in the Lower Haight district of San Francisco. Through paper-thin walls, they were informally introduced to their middle-aged alcoholic neighbors, the most unlikely of roommates—Raymond Huffman, a raging homophobe, and Peter Haskett, a flamboyant gay man. Night after night, the boys were treated to a seemingly endless stream of vodka-fueled altercations between the two and for 18 months, they hung a microphone from their kitchen window to chronicle the bizarre and violent relationship between their insane neighbors. Oftentimes nonsensical and always vitriolic, the diatribes of Peter and Ray were an audio goldmine just begging to be recorded and passed around on the underground tape market. Their tapes went on to inspire a cult following, spawning sell-out CD's, comic artworks by Dan Clowes ("Ghostworld"), stage-plays, music from the likes of Devo and a Hollywood feeding frenzy.
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