If you've ever dreamed of being special, dreamed of a proper, utopian society, despised the deceit and hypocrisy around you, and finally listened to the very strange but trendy last 20 years of 'punk' music, you should see this movie. And if you're still living it, it's a must-see. It's like a textbook. Life of Punk from A to Z.
I liked Matthew Lillard a lot more in this movie than in any of the others, because this is where he was so in character that the movie feels like a documentary. Although it is partly a documentary. No scenery - a real city. No made-up characters - there were thousands of people like Stevo and Bob at any given time. And their fates were repeated and life posed the same questions to them. And everyone found a solution.
Each one had his own. But only Stephen was able to retain the clarity of thought that makes a man a punk, no matter what society he was in.