​Westwood: Punk, Icon, Activist review – Vivienne is the real deal

Kate Moss delivers a killer anecdote but the subject of this documentary is reluctant to reveal much about her glory years

Towards the end of this documentary, Vivienne Westwood’s son Joe Corré describes her as Britain’s last genuine punk. There is truth in that. Punk may have effectively vanished in music, but it lives on in Westwood’s clothes, style and the poses she strikes publicly. In this film, she is reluctant to talk about punk rock or her personal life, perhaps aware of the controversy generated by her ghosted 2016 autobiography, in which she laid into various figures and made sweeping and rather startling statements – such as claiming that her first husband, airline pilot Derek Westwood, managed the Who in the early 60s.

This film takes us through her early life: when she wafts into the orbit of Malcolm McLaren, who made their fashion store Sex a punk headquarters of sorts. Their acrimonious split left Westwood to battle on alone, to raise two children and to survive the worlds of fashion and business – which she did, with no little courage, and mostly without the corporate support which was to be lavished on more mainstream designers such as Stella McCartney.

We see the notorious Sue Lawley TV interview from the 80s, when the studio audience roared with mocking laughter as models came on wearing her creations. Westwood was at first scandalised, threatening to stop the proceedings, but then maintains a strange kind of wounded equanimity, which induced a guilty-looking Lawley to ask if she was upset. The best anecdote is saved for the closing credits, for some reason, when Kate Moss reveals that Westwood told her that, if she was gay, Kate would be the one she would fall for.

Contributor

Peter Bradshaw

The GuardianTramp

Related Content

Article image
Anarchy! The McLaren Westwood Gang review – scrappy tribute to Sex Pistols mischief-maker
Phil Strongman uses archive interview footage to place McLaren and punk in the tradition of anarchism, situationalism and pop art

Peter Bradshaw

15, Sep, 2016 @9:35 PM

Article image
Wake Up Punk review – memorabilia-burning punk progeny fails to check his privilege
This documentary about Joe Corré, the son of Vivienne Westwood and the late Malcolm McLaren, is a strangely listless and unlikable affair

Peter Bradshaw

04, May, 2022 @2:00 PM

Article image
Westwood: Punk, Icon, Activist – watchable documentary on a fashion one-off
The punk couturier is a grumpy delight in Lorna Tucker’s entertaining film

Wendy Ide

25, Mar, 2018 @7:00 AM

Article image
Poly Styrene: I Am a Cliché review – riveting take on British punk heroine
The X-Ray Spex singer is revealed as a mystic, rebellious working-class woman of colour in this valuable film

Peter Bradshaw

05, Mar, 2021 @9:00 AM

Article image
Jordan, the face of punk: 'The things I wore made people apoplectic'
She was the rubber-knickered peroxide bombshell who put the sex into the Pistols. Now she’s written a memoir of her years causing outrage at the heart of punk

Paul Tierney

23, Apr, 2019 @1:12 PM

Article image
Here to Be Heard: The Story of the Slits review – rise of the punk pranksters
This baggy documentary charts the career of the tough-talking all-female rockers who redefined the concept of ‘girl bands’

Peter Bradshaw

23, Mar, 2018 @11:00 AM

Article image
The Punk Singer review – Kathleen Hanna makes a terrific doc subject
The energetic and confrontational co-founder of the 1990s Riot Grrrl movement and lead singer of Bikini Kill and Le Tigre is still beguiling to watch, writes Steve Rose

Steve Rose

22, May, 2014 @9:01 PM

Article image
Dame Vivienne Westwood: fashion designer dies aged 81
Iconoclastic British designer rose to prominence by outfitting the Sex Pistols as punk took off in the 1970s

Alyx Gorman and Sian Cain

30, Dec, 2022 @7:52 AM

The Punk Syndrome – review
This likable documentary about a Finnish punk band whose members are all middle-aged men with learning disabilities opens a window on to another world, writes Peter Bradshaw

Peter Bradshaw

31, Jan, 2013 @9:15 PM

Article image
Bad Reputation review – smart, funny Joan Jett rock retrospective
The proto-punk icon comes over as generous and self-aware in Kevin Kerslake’s documentary, which ropes in starry friends like Debbie Harry and Iggy Pop

Leslie Felperin

25, Oct, 2018 @11:00 AM