Unpredictable, brutal, and musically terrifying, 'Green Room' is worth seeing, even if it's a bit too extreme to leave you clamoring for an encore. The key players fight and fall realistically, and the tension is predicated on the ebb and flow of each side's success. Genres: Bareback Sex, Gay Couples, Teens, Big Dick, Rimming, Sucking, Fucking. Amid all the grounded violence, neither the band nor the Nazis have an advantage. Identical twins Ricky and Randy Hawke get to tag-team hot Asian bottoms. Bones are snapped, chests are ripped open, and limbs are shot off. Better still, Saulnier ensures that 'Green Room' is immensely physical. Patrick Stewart turns in a noteworthy and subversive performance as Darcy, the leader of the skinheads, and absolutely oozes menace. The band and the survivor, Amber (an awesome Imogen Poots), lock themselves away in the venue's green room, now desperate to escape alive. Their set is poorly received, especially after they cover the Dead Kennedys' 'Nazi Punks F*** Off.' Then, on their way out, they stumble upon a murder-in-progress.
Four-piece punk band the Ain't Rights, which includes Anton Yelchin's bassist Pat and Alia Shawkat's guitarist Sam, book a gig at a backwoods venue run by white supremacists. Fordyce did full justice to it, so that the single tankard, passed from hand to hand, was often refilled by Isobel.