• Director(s)

    Jak Hutchcraft

  • Production Year

    2023

  • Genre(s)

    Documentary, Music

  • Approx. running minutes

    89m

  • Cast

    Fatboy Slim

Film

Right Here, Right Now

strong language, infrequent drug references

RIGHT HERE, RIGHT NOW is a British documentary about the events surrounding The Big Beach Boutique II, DJ Fatboy Slim’s free Brighton concert in 2002, which unexpectedly attracted more than 250,000 people.

RIGHT HERE, RIGHT NOW is a British documentary about the events surrounding The Big Beach Boutique II, DJ Fatboy Slim’s free Brighton concert in 2002, which unexpectedly attracted more than 250,000 people.

language
There is use of strong language (‘f**k’). Milder terms include ‘piss’, ‘arse’ and ‘shit’, in addition to use of the ‘V-sign’ gesture.
drugs
There are infrequent verbal references linking the rise of the house music scene to ecstasy misuse. An interviewee suggests that ecstasy created a ‘culture of love’ which ended football violence. Visual references include brief images of ecstasy pills, and of a marijuana joint being rolled.
flashing/flickering lights
This work contains flashing images which may affect viewers who are susceptible to photosensitive epilepsy.
additional issues
There is a short sequence of archive footage in which a police officer drags a rave attendee along the ground. A brief strip club sequence shows a performer dancing on a pole, without visible nudity. An interview features light-hearted references to a man having pinged a stranger’s exposed G-string in the crowd. Other scenes contain brief images of non-sexualised rear nudity.
  • Director(s)

    Jak Hutchcraft

  • Production Year

    2023

  • Genre(s)

    Documentary, Music

  • Approx. running minutes

    89m

  • Cast

    Fatboy Slim

strong language, infrequent drug references
Classified Date:
14/08/2023
Version:
2D
Use:
VOD/Streaming
Distributor:
Spirit Entertainment
language
There is use of strong language (‘f**k’). Milder terms include ‘piss’, ‘arse’ and ‘shit’, in addition to use of the ‘V-sign’ gesture.
drugs
There are infrequent verbal references linking the rise of the house music scene to ecstasy misuse. An interviewee suggests that ecstasy created a ‘culture of love’ which ended football violence. Visual references include brief images of ecstasy pills, and of a marijuana joint being rolled.
flashing/flickering lights
This work contains flashing images which may affect viewers who are susceptible to photosensitive epilepsy.
additional issues
There is a short sequence of archive footage in which a police officer drags a rave attendee along the ground. A brief strip club sequence shows a performer dancing on a pole, without visible nudity. An interview features light-hearted references to a man having pinged a stranger’s exposed G-string in the crowd. Other scenes contain brief images of non-sexualised rear nudity.
  • Classified date

    14/08/2023

  • Language

    English