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New Rockumentary - Dead City Punx - To Have LA Premiere This April

Film Feature by Chris Olson


New Rockumentary - Dead City Punx - To Have LA Premiere This April

This April, Los Angeles is set to host the world premiere of a project that, on paper at least, sounds like the most explosive addition to the genre in years: Dead City Punx.


As someone who has spent a significant portion of my life submerged in the world of music documentaries, I find my anticipation for this particular release reaching a fever pitch. We often talk about "DIY culture" in the film world as a polished aesthetic, but Dead City Punx seems poised to drag that definition back into the mud and the fire where it belongs. Presented by BEYOND THE STREETS, the film follows the eponymous band—Meka, Grumpy, Mike, and Adrian—who essentially resuscitated the Los Angeles music scene during the pandemic through sheer, illegal force of will.


DEAD CITY PUNX - Official Trailer

The pedigree behind the camera is what first caught my eye. The documentary is executive produced by Roger Gastman, Joseph Pattisall, and, most intriguingly, Zack de la Rocha. As a lifelong fan of Rage Against the Machine, seeing de la Rocha’s name attached to a film project carries immense weight. He has always been an artist who demands authenticity and systemic challenge; for him to put his stamp on the story of the Dead City Punx suggests that this is far more than a simple concert film. It is a political statement.


From what we know so far, the story of the band is the stuff of underground legend. Born from stolen equipment and street-life connections, they didn't just play gigs; they staged tactical occupations. Using social media as a "bat signal," they drew massive crowds to illegal outdoor shows featuring shoplifted wooden stages, graffiti backdrops, and literal bonfires. These weren't just performances; they were confrontations that pitted the band against the LAPD, the LAFD, and the Mayor’s office.


What fascinates me most about this upcoming premiere is the promise of "raw, unfiltered" footage. Much of the film is built from fan-filmed concert tapes and exclusive interviews, capturing the moments when police helicopters began to circle overhead. In an era where music can often feel commodified and safe, the idea of a band that "makes shows a crime scene" is incredibly refreshing. It forces the viewer to confront what punk actually means when the stakes move beyond fashion and into the realm of the right to assemble in public space.


The world premiere screenings are taking place on 16 April 2026 at The Regent Theater in Los Angeles, with a follow-up gallery opening at BEYOND THE STREETS on 17 April. While I won’t be in the heart of the mosh pit at The Regent myself, the ripples of this release are already being felt across the Atlantic. For those of us in the UK film community, we are watching closely. We need films that remind us of the margins of society—the outcasts who refuse to be silenced even when the world shuts down.


If Dead City Punx can capture even a fraction of the mayhem it describes, we are looking at a landmark piece of music journalism.

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