24 Hour Party People is a
British film about
Manchester's
popular music community from 1976 to 1992, and specifically about
Factory Records. It was written by
Frank Cottrell Boyce and directed by
Michael Winterbottom. The film was entered into the
2002 Cannes Film Festival.
It begins with the
punk rock era, and moves through the 1980s into the "
Madchester" scene of the late 1980s and early 1990s. The main character is
Tony Wilson, a news reporter for
Granada Television and the head of
Factory Records (played by comedian
Steve Coogan), and the narrative largely follows his career, while also covering the major Factory artists, especially
Joy Division and
New Order,
A Certain Ratio,
The Durutti Column, and the
Happy Mondays.
The film is a dramatisation based on a combination of real events, rumours,
urban legends, and the imaginations of the scriptwriter - as the film makes clear. In one scene featuring
Howard Devoto (played by
Martin Hancock) having sex with Wilson's first wife, the real Devoto, an extra in the scene, turns to the camera and says "I definitely don't remember this happening". The
fourth wall is frequently broken, with Wilson (who also acts as the
narrator) frequently commenting on events as they occur directly to camera, at one point declaring that he's "being
postmodern, before it's fashionable". The actors are often intercut with real contemporary concert footage, including the
Sex Pistols gig at the
Lesser Free Trade Hall.
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