In 16th century in Britain, a huge revolution was happened named The Great Cultural Revolution which make an important turns in the whole culture. The movie presents some of hidden things about this revolution with some special guests such as Sandy Shaw, Twiggy and Paul McCartney.
Thumbnail sketches of Pirate Radio, the Pill, London fashion and photography whiz by in a rush. It often comes off like a telly advert, but an expertly made one.
Many of the anecdotes and insights here will already be familiar to anyone with even a passing knowledge of the period but that doesn't reduce in the slightest the nostalgic pleasure that the film provides throughout.
The longer the doc goes on, the more it sacrifices depth for frenetic overload, with too little in the way of insightful analysis to shed fresh perspective on the Swinging London years.
The enduring mystery of what Michael Caine is thinking and feeling remains intact during his watchable, if somewhat exasperating docu-reminiscence of 1960s swinging London.
A brilliantly thrilling look back at the flowering of creativity and freethinking spirit of 1960s London, through the thoroughly charming perspective of Michael Caine.
There's a tremendous amount of pleasure to be had in David Batty's "My Generation," a sloppy wet kiss to Michael Caine and British youth culture of the 1960s.