{"id":32114,"date":"2022-06-01T14:36:06","date_gmt":"2022-06-01T14:36:06","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/harchi90.com\/pistol-season-1-review-ign\/"},"modified":"2022-06-01T14:36:06","modified_gmt":"2022-06-01T14:36:06","slug":"pistol-season-1-review-ign","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/harchi90.com\/pistol-season-1-review-ign\/","title":{"rendered":"Pistol: Season 1 Review – IGN"},"content":{"rendered":"
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Pistol premieres Tuesday, May 31, 2022, with a full season drop on Hulu.<\/em><\/p>\n

Ask anyone to pick a band that best exemplifies the punk era and most will say Sex Pistols, even if they’ve never actually listened to them. They formed in 1975 and only lasted two and half years before they flamed out in the wake of the heroin overdose of their bassist, Sid Vicious, and bad blood amongst the remaining members. In the years since, the legend of the toxic romance between Sid and Nancy Spungen has somewhat overtaken the output of the band itself. The new FX series, Pistol, is an origin story approach to telling their story, mostly from the perspective of guitarist Steve Jones (Toby Wallace), from the band’s initial days through to their 2002 reunion performance. The six-episode series certainly contextualizes the punk scene, and Sex Pistols’ place within that era, but it lacks depth when it comes to making any of the players resonate as real people. Aside from Jones’ backstory, no one else in the band gets much of a history and as such, the episodes play out more like a scripted docuseries that lovingly recreates their big milestones but feels undercooked in giving us insight into who they really were as actual people. <\/p>\n

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All six episodes of Pistol are written by Craig Pearce (Moulin Rouge<\/u>, Elvis<\/u>) and directed by Danny Boyle (Trainspotting<\/u>), based on Jones’ autobiography, Lonely Boy: Tales from a Sex Pistol. The limited series retains Jones as its central character, with the first episode, “Track 1: The Cloak of Invisibility,” diving into his late teen miscreant years, where he stole David Bowie’s lipstick-stained mic, and the gear of other major acts of the day, when he crept into the empty London’s Hammerstein Odeon in the wee morning hours. Steve is the product of a terrible family situation, sexually abused and browbeat by his step-father di lui; essentially, he’s the quintessential angry young man who steals, does drugs, and dreams of making it big with his band The Strand, which he then lamentably renamed The Swankers.<\/p>\n

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