Starshaped

Starshaped is a 1993 documentary film on the British band Blur. Conceived as a fly on the wall documentary, it became a collection of live performances, videos and festival footage, and band interviews.

Starshaped
Directed byMatthew Longfellow
Produced byCeri Levy
StarringBlur
Music byBlur
Edited byCeri Levy, Darren Richardson, Matthew Longfellow, Neil Cunningham
Distributed byParlophone, Ventura Distribution
Release date
  • 12 September 1993 (1993-09-12)
Running time
60 minutes
LanguageEnglish

Highlights include the band's performance at the 1991 Reading Festival and a brief interview with the late John Peel, and the band's 1992 appearance at the Glastonbury Festival when singer Damon Albarn lunges into a PA speaker which falls, injuring his foot. The band are regularly captured in drunken states through the film, sometimes arguing and even (in Albarn's case) vomiting. The majority of the music in the film comes from the band's first two albums, Leisure and Modern Life Is Rubbish, although the non-album tracks "Popscene" and "Day Upon Day" are also included.

Several fans give their verdict on Blur, particularly on how the band have perfected their live act. The band's manager also appears in some scenes, although his face is blanked out. Two German fans seem obsessed with the band and Damon Albarn in particular, having followed the group from New York to England to Germany.

Since its original 1993 release, the film has gained a cult following and was re-released on DVD in 2004.

Track listing

VHS

Starshaped

  1. "Intermission" – 0:10
  2. "Explain" – 2:28 (mislabeled "Can't Explain")
  3. "There's No Other Way" – 2:39
  4. "Inertia" – 0:51 (mislabeled "Luminous")
  5. "She's So High" – 1:59
  6. "Colin Zeal" – 3:08
  7. "Popscene" – 3:12
  8. "When Will We Be Married" – 0:34
  9. "Sunday Sunday" – 2:53
  10. "Wassailing Song" – 2:13
  11. "Coping" – 3:05
  12. "Day Upon Day" – 3:43
  13. "For Tomorrow" – 4:37
  14. "Postman Pat Theme" – 0:29
  15. "Chemical World" – 4:07
  16. "Advert" – 4:01
  17. "Commercial Break" – 0:52
  18. "Sunday Sunday" – 2:53

Promo clips

  1. "She's So High"
  2. "There's No Other Way"
  3. "Bang!"
  4. "Pop Scene"
  5. "For Tomorrow"
  6. "Chemical World"
  7. "Sunday Sunday"

DVD

Starshaped

  1. "Intermission"
  2. "Explain" (mislabeled "Can't Explain")
  3. "There's No Other Way"
  4. "Luminous" (misprint, actually "Inerita")
  5. "She Is So High"
  6. "Colin Zeal"
  7. "Pop Scene"
  8. "When Will We Be Married"
  9. "Sunday Sunday"
  10. "Wassailing Song"
  11. "Coping"
  12. "Day Upon Day"
  13. "For Tomorrow"
  14. "Chemical World"
  15. "Advert"
  16. "Commercial Break"

Live in Kilburn

  1. "Popscene"
  2. "Fool"
  3. "High Cool"
  4. "Bad Day"
  5. "Oily Water"
  6. "Slow Down"
  7. "There's No Other Way"
  8. "Turn It Up"
  9. "She's So High"
  10. "Wear Me Down"
  11. "Come Together"
  12. "Day Upon Day"
  13. "Sing"
  14. "Explain"
  15. "Outro" ("Commercial Break")

Live at the Princess Charlotte

  1. "Won't Do It"
  2. "There's No Other Way"
  3. "High Cool"
  4. "Wear Me Down"

Easter egg (hidden track)

  1. "There's No Other Way" (US music video)
gollark: As a mostly high level programmer, these are among the least confusing things.
gollark: You can add to it and it might reallocate as needed, I think.
gollark: Null terminated string bad, see.
gollark: Some GTech™ bee neuron systems are seemingly able to comprehend C++. But they soon stopped being able to understand anything *but* C++.
gollark: Misinterpreted a lot, that is. Some unlucky C programmer had visions of a future incomprehensible Haskell and unleashed it upon mankind.
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