Here's the deal: this is a really well-made documentary about a band most people have never heard of. The critical scores are genuinely impressive, and if you've got a teen who's discovered punk rock and wants to understand the lineage, this is solid educational content wrapped in loud guitars.
But let's be real—the Venn diagram of 'teens who will sit through a 2013 documentary about a 1980s punk band' and 'teens who exist' has very little overlap. This is for the music-obsessed kid who's already diving deep into Spotify rabbit holes, not for casual viewers.
The perseverance story is legitimately inspiring (dude had brain tumors and kept drumming), and there's value in learning about people who influenced culture without chasing fame. But it's niche. Very niche.
If your teen is into this stuff, great—it's age-appropriate, thoughtful, and free on multiple platforms. If they're not already asking to watch it, don't force it. There are more accessible ways to teach resilience that don't require an hour of punk rock history.




