Nazi Pop Twins (also known as America's Hate Rock Twins ) is a 2007 British documentary wherein filmmaker James Quinn travels to the United States to investigate Prussian Blue , a pop duo composed of twin sisters Lynx and Lamb Gaede. The film first aired on 19 July 2007 on Channel 4 in the United Kingdom. The documentary was filmed over the course of a year. Dresden Gaede, the twins' toddler half-sister and April Gaede's parents, Bill and Dianne, also appear in the documentary.
5-461: In a change from a previous documentary featuring the duo, Louis and the Nazis by Louis Theroux , Nazi Pop Twins was without humorous irony. Filmed mainly in low-light, indoors and/or in winter, it stresses tension between the twins and their mother, April — manager and driving force behind the band — and the stress the white nationalist ideology has put on grandparents Bill and Dianne's relationship to
10-626: A political documentary film is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . Louis and the Nazis Louis and the Nazis is a British documentary that was televised on 21 December 2003. It was directed by Stuart Cabb and written by Louis Theroux . The documentary ran for 80 minutes. Louis travels to California to meet the man dubbed "the most dangerous racist in America", Tom Metzger . Louis meets him, his family and his publicity manager as well as following him to skinhead rallies and on
15-584: A visit to Mexico. He also encounters Lynx and Lamb Gaede, being Nazi-pop folk duo Prussian Blue , their mother, April Gaede, and maternal grandfather, Bill Gaede. Louis Theroux would revisit the subjects of the documentary in his book The Call of the Weird: Travels in American Subcultures . The New Zealand Listener described the documentary " Louis and the Nazis is the most brilliant TV programme I wish I’d never seen." The Times described
20-478: A warm reception at a bar in Fresno, until their background is revealed by their mother. David Lane , an incarcerated neo-Nazi domestic terrorist, is heard speaking by telephone with Prussian Blue and termed them "fantasy sweethearts" in a manner Quinn found disturbing and inappropriate. This article about a music-related documentary film is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . This article about
25-464: The point where Dianne threatens to leave Bill during the making of the program. It also touches on the fact that this ideology seems to have been a factor in the breakup of mother April's marriage, which also happens concurrently to the making of the program. The girls are also shown trying to distance themselves from the " white pride " movement, expressing doubt that it is what they really believe in. For example, Prussian Blue's non-political songs receive
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