Control remains a masterpiece because it captures the specific frequency of Joy Division’s music—the tension between the driving, mechanical bass and the fragile, human voice. It asks us to look past the "Unknown Pleasures" T-shirts and see the boy who was simply too sensitive for the world he helped create.
The title is the film’s cruelest irony. Ian Curtis was a man losing control of everything: Control(2007)
Corbijn treats Curtis not as a superstar, but as a poet who was accidentally given a microphone. The film highlights the tragedy of a man who could articulate the pain of a generation in his lyrics ("Existence, well, what does it matter?") but couldn't find the words to ask for help in his own kitchen. 4. The Exit Control remains a masterpiece because it captures the
The ending of Control is famously devoid of "movie magic." There is no swelling score. Just a quiet kitchen, a laundry line, and the haunting spin of a record. By stripping away the glamour, the film forces us to confront the reality of suicide: it isn't a poetic finale; it is a devastating, lonely silence. Final Thoughts Ian Curtis was a man losing control of