The Dirt (2019)
Story overview
The Dirt is a 2019 biographical drama about the rise of the rock band Mötley Crüe. It follows their journey from struggling musicians to international fame during the 1980s. The film explores the band's wild lifestyle, creative process, and personal relationships amidst the excesses of rock stardom.
Parent Guide
TV-MA rated biographical drama about rock band excess with mature themes throughout
Content breakdown
Contains scenes of conflict, arguments, and reckless behavior that could be dangerous
Includes intense emotional situations and consequences of destructive lifestyle choices
Frequent strong language consistent with the rock music setting
Contains sexual situations, references, and partial nudity in keeping with the rock lifestyle theme
Frequent depiction of alcohol and drug use as central to the rock band lifestyle
Contains emotionally charged scenes involving relationships, fame pressures, and personal struggles
Parent tips
This film is rated TV-MA for mature audiences only, indicating content unsuitable for viewers under 17. Parents should be aware this biographical drama depicts the rock music lifestyle of the 1980s, which includes mature themes. Consider watching first to determine if it's appropriate for your teen, as it portrays adult situations and behaviors.
Parent chat guide
Parent follow-up questions
- Did you see any musical instruments in the movie?
- What colors did you notice in the film?
- Was there any music you liked?
- Did you see people singing?
- What was your favorite part of watching?
- What did you think about how the band members treated each other?
- How did the characters show they were friends?
- What did you notice about how the band became famous?
- What kinds of music did you hear in the movie?
- How did the characters express their feelings?
- How does the film show the difference between public image and private life?
- What challenges did the band face as they became successful?
- How did the characters handle fame and attention?
- What messages does the film give about friendship in difficult times?
- How does the movie portray creative collaboration?
- How does the film comment on the rock music culture of the 1980s?
- What does the movie suggest about the relationship between creativity and self-destructive behavior?
- How are consequences portrayed for the characters' actions?
- What perspectives does the film offer on fame and its pressures?
- How does the biographical format affect how we view the characters' stories?
🎭 Story Kernel
The movie's core theme explores the American Dream's toxic underbelly through Mötley Crüe's rise. It's not about music but about addiction—to fame, substances, and self-destruction. The characters are driven by a desperate need to escape their traumatic pasts (Nikki's abusive father, Tommy's poverty, Vince's family expectations) through increasingly extreme hedonism. The film shows how their shared trauma created a codependent brotherhood that enabled their worst impulses, making the band both their salvation and their prison. Ultimately, it questions whether artistic genius requires personal annihilation.
🎬 Visual Aesthetics
The visual language mirrors the band's psychological decay through deliberate aesthetic shifts. Early scenes use warm, saturated colors and steady camerawork during their initial success. As their addiction deepens, the palette turns sickly—neon greens and yellows dominate club scenes, while domestic spaces become cold and sterile. The camera becomes increasingly unstable during drug sequences, using Dutch angles and rapid cuts to simulate disorientation. Notable is the contrast between concert footage (polished, energetic) and backstage reality (gritty, handheld), visually reinforcing their public persona versus private collapse.
🔍 Details & Easter Eggs
💡 Behind the Scenes
Machine Gun Kelly (playing Tommy Lee) learned to play drums left-handed to match Lee's actual setup, practicing for months. The infamous 'green M&M' contract clause was actually recreated using period-correct candy from 1987. Director Jeff Tremaine intentionally cast relatively unknown actors for the band members to avoid preconceived star personas interfering with the raw portrayal. Several original Mötley Crüe members served as consultants, with Nikki Sixx particularly involved in accurately depicting his overdose scene.
Where to watch
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Trailer
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