
As newspaper headlines go, it's up there with "Gotcha!" and "Freddie Starr Ate My Hamster". The morning after The Sex Pistols swore on live TV, the Daily Mirror led the hungry hack pack with a front page that screamed "The Filth And The Fury". It's fitting that Julien Temple makes this the title of his Pistols documentary because the band - whose recorded output struggles to fill two albums - has gone down in history more as a tabloid phenomenon than a musical force.
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